RangerDave wrote:
Obviously it's a rather unilluminating tautology to say you can't "borrow your way out of debt", but borrowing can certainly be part of an overall debt-reduction strategy. For instance, if I refi my mortgage at a lower rate, even though the principal remains the same, the total payments over the life of the loan will be reduced.
If you refinance your house with affecting the principal balance, you're some sort of wizard or the recipient of a government subsidy that obviates the need for a new down-payment.
RangerDave wrote:
Likewise, borrowing $10k to buy a car so I can accept a more distant job that pays me an extra $20k/yr would reduce my overall debt load after the first 6 months (roughly speaking), which, incidentally, also amounts to "spending myself into liquidity".
Not in the slightest: you've increased your debt on the assumption you will continue to earn more money. Moreover, you're assuming you will do nothing with the increased income except pay for that car until it's free-and-clear. Still, you've done nothing but increased your debt.
RangerDave wrote:
In addition, every time a company borrows money to fund an expansion that generates revenues in excess of debt service or a refit that generates efficiency gains and cost-savings in excess of debt service, and uses that excess to pay down other debt, that company has "borrowed its way out of debt" and/or has "spent itself into liquidity". Further, if interest rates are expected to rise, it can make sense to borrow now (at a locked-in rate, of course) rather than later, so that your overall debt (principal + interest) will be lower. Similarly, if inflation is going up, borrowing now and repaying with "cheaper" dollars later can certainly make sense too.
This is so far from the truth I can't help but laugh; at least, however, I know what they're teaching you in finance classes and on Wallstreet, now. No wonder **** is so **** up ...
You cannot borrow your way out of debt. If you're paying interest, you've time-shifted some amount of your future purchasing power on the bet that inflation, future gains in wages, and other returns will outstrip the interest. What you have not done, despite all of your bald-assertions otherwise, is reduced your debt-load or liability portfolio by assuming more debt.
Of course, since all of your examples require an external shift in the supply curve of your monetary supply beyond the initial debt assumption, I'll just guess you concede that you're wrong?
You can't borrow your way out of debt.
You cannot spend your way to liquidity.
Keep trying to tell me otherwise, and I'll keep laughing at you and your education, because obviously that J.D. and all prior education has failed you if you honestly think you're right on this matter.
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