Oh it’s so much more than the just the car market. Housing is too expensive as well. And so many other goods and services. I don’t know anyone that’s not in crazy debt
The problem with 2008 wasn’t high foreclosure rates (that was just the trigger), it’s that the foreclosure risk wasn’t properly baked into lending rates. So banks thought they had less risk than they did, and that was due to greed (i.e. banks selling loans in buckets that masked the risk). Since then there have been a lot of changes in how risk is managed, so I highly doubt we’ll see a similar cascading failure. We may see higher foreclosure rates due to high borrowing rate shock, but that shouldn’t translate to a recession, it would just hurt bank profits in the short term. At least that’s the theory.
So if banks don’t start failing, we shouldn’t see a big disruption to employment, therefore no major recession. At least that’s my take.
As for anecdotes, most of the people I know aren’t in crazy debt. Looking around the neighborhood generally doesn’t match what’s going on more broadly.
Eh, I think this will just reinvigorate the used market and push prices of new cars down. I doubt the car market would trigger a recession.
Oh it’s so much more than the just the car market. Housing is too expensive as well. And so many other goods and services. I don’t know anyone that’s not in crazy debt
The home foreclosure rate is way below where we were at around 2008. It is trending up, but slowly. Consumer debt is high, but debt to income is in a pretty consistent range.
The problem with 2008 wasn’t high foreclosure rates (that was just the trigger), it’s that the foreclosure risk wasn’t properly baked into lending rates. So banks thought they had less risk than they did, and that was due to greed (i.e. banks selling loans in buckets that masked the risk). Since then there have been a lot of changes in how risk is managed, so I highly doubt we’ll see a similar cascading failure. We may see higher foreclosure rates due to high borrowing rate shock, but that shouldn’t translate to a recession, it would just hurt bank profits in the short term. At least that’s the theory.
So if banks don’t start failing, we shouldn’t see a big disruption to employment, therefore no major recession. At least that’s my take.
As for anecdotes, most of the people I know aren’t in crazy debt. Looking around the neighborhood generally doesn’t match what’s going on more broadly.