I have to agree that the student loan thing is a tempest in a teapot. Even if it went cents on the dollar. There's a reason the charts show % growth in various loan classes rather than $ growth. Probably single digit percent growth in real estate loans equals the entire amount of student loans.This thread has some great responses that are really making me think, thanks guys. Some things I wanted to point out though:
It's not so much that the economy is unstable, but where will the instability come from? We are somewhat all in agreement that there will be a liquidity problem in the future where the economy will lose an entire generation of consumers to debt slavery before they even hit their 20s.
@Nobert had a good set of data on the current state of student loans. These are rookie numbers: As of recently, the government was on the hook directly for 17-24 billion in loans, let's multiply that by 10 maybe to get the entire exposure in the market: 170-240 billion. How much of that 24 billion is likely to be repaid over 10 years? Quite a huge chunk. So even marking to market will give you, at most, a 50% haircut. And that's a really, really bad case. Nothing like cents on the dollar like with the GFC. I struggle to see this being a major problem in the near future.
Yes, and so in a few years, we should look out for the people who have these on their books.
Trade wars and busted unicorns are the potential catalysts. OK then. Who is exposed to unicorns? The fallout of trade wars is likely priced in.
Food for thought, what is the elasticity of the demand curve for imported consumer goods? I know someone in the import business, he's currently eating 90%+ of the tariffs. Basically Amazon, Walmart...are telling their suppliers that they have to eat the extra cost if they want to continue to do business with them. He can only do this for a very short time more before he starts passing it on or goes out of business, and most suppliers are like him, currently operating at zero or negative profit in hopes of riding this out. So, what happens when they all basically run out of money at once and go away? We run into basic goods shortages while the supplier network re-sorts itself and simultaneously run into a 25% increase in most basic consumer goods. If the demand curve is fairly elastic, that won't have a huge impact. If it's fairly inelastic, which it may very well be given the part of the income spectrum that is the major buyer of these goods, that could be a significant shock to the economy?
You people that talk sense bother me.