Aizle wrote:
Hannibal wrote:
Isn't it like using part of your credit cards cash advance to pay your minimum balance?
Sure. But again, how is that bad (assuming you needed to advance cash for some other emergency).
Using the credit card example, here is how I see it.
Something bad happens where you need ready cash right now. The lesser evil of the choices you have is to do a cash advance on one of your credit cards. You guess that you'll need $5,000.00 to cover your problem. After you get into it, you end up only needing $3,000.00 to deal with the issue, leaving you with $2,000.00 left over. At this point, wouldn't the smartest thing be to pay that $2,000.00 back to the credit card to reduce your balance?
That's what I see the administration looking at doing, which to me seems amazingly refreshing, instead of the usual which has been to spend it on some other pet pork project somewhere.
First of all, if you pulled 5k to pay for something that costs 3k, then yes using the 2k to pay down the original 5k is the "best thing you could do,
given that you've already borrowed 5k," which costs money. The better thing to do would be to have not borrowed more than you needed. The
best thing would have been to not gotten yourself into a situation where you don't have liquid reserves to cover emergencies.
Second, false analogy, at based on how I'm reading the article. Let me 'splain:
You borrow five thousand thousands of dollars ($5m) for an imaginary need. This borrowing incurs interest. You spend 3.7m dollars of your borrowed five, and a year later you owe interest on the 5m.
You use some of the remaining 5m (1.3m) to pay the interest on your mortgage, and don't pay down the 5m at all.
For an additional fun note, let's add this part of the story:
You lent out some of the 3.7m, say 3.0m to other people. They want to pay back 2.2m of the 3m. You say no, and have the ability to force them not to repay. You accrue interest on the 3.7m at a lesser rate than they do on the 3m. You earn money by forcing them not to repay, in violation of the original arrangement. Fun earning money, isn't it?