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hunson_abadeer | 2 years ago
Debt is a useful tool, but it's also dangerous. It's one thing if you're using it to advance some important cause... you know, making a big bet on a business idea, making your dreams come true. But if you're taking risks for, as the author puts it, "consumption smoothing"... there's a good chance of ending in trouble for no good reason.
Plus, we're not hyper-rational robots. Spending money is habit-forming. It's often about gratification, about social standing, about competing with peers. Especially for younger folks, and especially for people in the Bay Area, where we often look up to people who essentially won the startup lottery or ended up getting lucky in some other way. Instead of "consumption smoothing", it's often better to ask if that consumption is useful to begin with.
nocoiner|2 years ago
Even big corporations that have contractually committed credit facilities have had banks shut those down during times of crisis (basically saying “sue us” to the borrower) so no matter how solid the ability to borrow may appear, that kind of thing has a tendency to evaporate in a moment, just when it’s needed most.
I have credit cards with a ridiculous aggregate credit limit, but in another 2008 scenario, anyone want to take bets on how long those credit limits stay high while unemployment is on its way to 14%? I would prefer not to.
And regardless of earning potential or useful skills, the owners and managers of for-profit enterprises are going to be belt-tightening at the same time (out of necessity or caution or simply by never letting a crisis go to waste) and their appetite for bringing on a new entry level employee will be limited - just at the time the rest of the system is grinding to a halt.
Someone in their 20s without significant financial or familial obligations is generally going to be well situated to make it through one of those crunches, but it doesn’t take a whole lot to bring the edifice crashing down.
mlinhares|2 years ago
This text is a pretty good example of the “smooth seas don’t make skillful sailors”.
dmoy|2 years ago
My credit card limits were reduced like 90% during the 2008 crash.
bombcar|2 years ago
beakerbreaker|2 years ago
A different approach to asset allocation https://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=5934
xorbax|2 years ago
That's what his parents are for
c22|2 years ago
s1artibartfast|2 years ago
People do it all the time and to far greater extremes. A mortgage to buy a house to raise a family at 30 instead of waiting until 60 is also a form of consumption smoothing.
It doesn't seem like they are being particularly risky. They have a large buffer, and a solid like of credit for more student debt. Who knows, maybe their student debt will even get forgiven.
bruce511|2 years ago
In one sense there's risk in taking on debt. Risk of job loss etc. In another the lender is taking on risk - they're hoping you can repay. Part of interest is to cover inflation, part is to hedge the risk.
Many comments in this thread start with the writers attitude to risk. What if....
And there are definitely places where the strategy can turn bad. Holding stocks can be valuable (they're growing faster than the cost of money) but they can also lose value (sometimes quickly).
Real value in shares is in long-term positions (just ride out the dips) but margin borrowing can force sales inside a dip if you are over-leveraged. How much you lever depends on your appetite for risk.
In a recent exchange with a potential client I explained that I get paid up front. He normally pays 90 days. He complained that my approach meant he'd "take all the risk".
"Exactly."
I offered to requote, where I take the risk, but I warned him it would be substantially more -because I put a high value on risk-. He trusted me enough to pay up front, and his risk paid off.
It's hard to quantify risk, but it really helps to at least understand it exists, and what the risks are. "Seeing" risk takes some practice.
hunson_abadeer|2 years ago
I wasn't advocating against risk-taking. I was advocating for doing it purposefully. Homeownership offers compelling and long-lasting quality-of-life benefits, and it's arguably not even pure "consumption" due to the acquisition of home equity.
Borrowing to buy a "status" car in your 20s, on the other hand, is probably a bad plan. Fleeting gratification and most of the money goes down the drain within 2-3 years. And if you get in the mode of living on credit day-to-day, you're probably gonna be making a lot of purchases of that sort.
hnfong|2 years ago
FWIW I think that's nuts too. Maybe it makes sense for people with a well defined, stable, secure career track (eg. civil servants, academics with tenure, etc.), but for those whose job could be severely disrupted by various shocks (which IMHO should include the majority of people), this taking out a mortgage under the assumption that your earnings would rise as your career progresses is really nuts.
Of course, the idea that a person takes out a mortgage at 30 is baked into modern society, so there are massive social structures to ensure that the average person is actually able to pay off their debt eventually. This includes shaming corporations for firing people or reducing wages for underperforming employees, government subsidies for business that should have just failed, underpaying juniors because otherwise who got money to raise your wages when you have 10 years of experience, etc. etc...
morpheuskafka|2 years ago
That's not true for the promotional APRs he is relying on, they are fixed for a certain term and can't just be cancelled by the company.