“Consumer debt is not your friend”

“Consumer debt is not your friend”

Posted on 13. May, 2010 by Adam Weight in Loans & Credit

I follow a number of blogs that interest me.  One of my favorites is the blog of New York Times best selling author and really nice guy, Seth Godin.  A few days ago he wrote a brilliant post on his blog about consumer debt that I wanted to share on Smart Banking Tips.  It’s posted here in its entirety with his permission.  (And I highly recommend subscribing to his blog and reading his latest book, Linchpin, too):

Consumer debt is not your friend

Here’s a simple MBA lesson: borrow money to buy things that go up in value. Borrow money if it improves your productivity and makes you more money. Leverage multiplies the power of your business because with leverage, every dollar you make in profit is multiplied.

That’s very different from the consumer version of this lesson: borrow money to buy things that go down in value. This is wrongheaded, short-term and irrational.

A few decades ago, mass marketers had a problem: American consumers had bought all they could buy. It was hard to grow because dispensable income was spoken for. The only way to grow was to steal market share, and that’s difficult. Enter consumer debt.

Why fight for a bigger piece of pie when you can make the whole pie bigger, the marketers think. Charge it, they say. Put it on your card. Pay now, why not, it’s like it’s free, because you don’t have to repay it until later. Why buy a Honda for cash when you can buy a Lexus with credit?

One argument is income shifting: you’re going to make a lot of money later, so borrow now so you can have a nicer car, etc. Then, when money is worth less to you, you can pay it back. This idea is actually reasonably new–fifty years or so–and it’s not borne out by what actually happens. Debt creates stress, stress creates behaviors that don’t lead to happiness…

The other argument is that it’s been around so long, it’s like a trusted friend. Debt seems like fun for a long time, until it’s not. And everyone does it. We’ve been sold very hard on acquisition = happiness, and consumer debt is the engine that permits this. Until it doesn’t.

The thing is, debt has become a marketed product in and of itself. It’s not a free service or a convenience, it’s a massive industry. And that industry works with all the other players in the system to grow, because (at least for now) when they grow, other marketers benefit as well. As soon as you get into serious consumer debt, you work for them, not for you.

It’s simple: when the utility of what you want (however you measure it) is less than the cost of the debt, don’t buy it.

Go read Dave Ramsey’s post: The truth about debt.

Dave has spent his career teaching people a lesson that many marketers are afraid of: debt is expensive, it compounds, it punishes you. Stuff now is rarely better than stuff later, because stuff now costs you forever if you go into debt to purchase it. He’s persistent and persuasive.

It takes discipline to forego pleasure now to avoid a lifetime of pain and fees. Many people, especially when confronted with a blizzard of debt marketing, can’t resist.

3 Responses to ““Consumer debt is not your friend””

  1. nursing schools

    14. May, 2010

    Keep posting stuff like this i really like it

  2. Jack Hadley

    14. May, 2010

    Thanks, Adam, for putting this in your blog. I read the Seth post and also thought it was SO useful. If all banks could become a resource for smart tips in the same way you’re working to do that… banking would change. And it would start “modeling the change it wants to be”.

  3. Adam Weight

    14. May, 2010

    Thanks for your continued support and interest in Smart Banking Tips, Jack. I agree with your comments. When more and more banks realize that there is a responsibility–even a need–to be more transparent and helpful to the people and communities they serve, the change will be meaningful and important because it will be dictated by poeple, not politicians.

    And Seth’s advice on properly approaching debt is dead on–even if it runs contrary to what you would expect a bank/banker to say about lending and debt.

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