Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Again, that's not what I'm trying to compare. My debt to take-home (after taxes) income versus the government's debt to income (revenue) ratio. How are these not comparable? Why are you using 75% of GDP?
Except that is exactly what you compared when you responded to the my comment about the countries being bankrupt. The original statement explicitly used % of GDP as a measure of fiscal stability (and the 75% should have been 70% from X's post, when discussing the US). GDP is not federal income,
and your continued use of your debt to income ratio as a defense of whether or not a country is bankrupt is faulty.
Quote:
How I'm making payments is irrelevant. If the government's obligations as a percentage of their revenue was the same as mine, and I'm making my payments, I think they should be able to make theirs, especially considering they are probably paying less in interest.
It was a rhetorical question, I wasn't actually seeking an answer about how you manage your personal finances, but making a point that if your income doesn't cover your annual expenditures (taking on more debt every year) nor allow you to even cover your interest payments for the debt you already have so you have borrow more to make those, you are bankrupt.
The fact that you can handle that debt load with your income but the Fed cannot should be the big neon light that your analogy doesn't fit.
And no, I'm willing to bet that the Fed has a higher interest rate in a lot of cases, as governments tend to use high interest rates as the carrot to get private individual and organizations to lend them money.
[i]the bolded word should have been "and", not "so". I lost my train of thought tabbing between programs.