"Last night, Goldman entered into unchartered territory with its first
observations of the student loan bubble in a piece titled "Are Student Loans
Driving Consumer Credit Growth?" Most of the observations are nothing new,
although author Alec Phillips does bring up one amusing implication of what the
soaring student debt may mean in macro terms. Specifically, to Goldman the rise
in debt is merely "
A more important source of countercyclical credit.
Since federal student lending standards are looser than most other
forms of credit, they now rely mainly on Treasury borrowing for financing, and
demand for them appears stronger when the labor market weakens
, it seems
likely that education-related debt will grow fastest at times when the economy
slows and other lenders are pulling back." In other words, the rate of
change in student debt is
inversely proportional to the improvement
in the US economy, or
directly proportional to its
deterioration. So since the student debt chart is, for lack of a
better word, parabolic, what does that mean for the broader economy?..."
Source: Name The
Bubble
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/are-soaring-student-loans-best-economic-indicator
No comments:
Post a Comment