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Re: Why the housing and mortgage crisis is far from over 

By: Decomposed in POPE 5 | Recommend this post (2)
Tue, 08 Jan 19 7:43 AM | 48 view(s)
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Msg. 19464 of 62138
(This msg. is a reply to 19462 by capt_nemo)

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Nemo:

Re: "...recent Treasury estimates putting the national debt at $22 trillion."
But that isn't how much we owe. It's a lie.

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) require every publicly traded corporation to include the present value of future obligations in its reported DEBT. The United States exempts itself from this requirement.

If the government reported its debt the same way these corporations do, the debt would be between $125 trillion and $200 trillion.

Then there's all the other debt: State, Municipal, Corporate, Personal....




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Why the housing and mortgage crisis is far from over
By: capt_nemo
in POPE 5
Tue, 08 Jan 19 7:37 AM
Msg. 19462 of 62138

Over the last five years, markets have pushed concerns about debt under the rug.

While economic growth and record-low interest rates have made it easy to service existing government debt, it’s also created a situation where government debt has grown in to over $63 trillion in absolute terms.

The global economic tide can change fast, and in the event of a recession or rapidly rising interest rates, debt levels could come back into the spotlight very quickly.

THE DEBT SNOWBALL
Today’s visualization comes to us from HowMuch.net and it rolls the world’s countries into a “snowball” of government debt, colored and arranged by debt-to-GDP ratios. The data itself comes from the IMF’s most recent October 2018 update.

The structure of the visualization is apt, because debt can accumulate in an unsustainable way if governments are not proactive. This situation can create a vicious cycle, where mounting debt can start hampering growth, making the debt ultimately harder to pay off.

Here are the countries with the most debt on the books:

Rank Country Debt-to-GDP Ratio (2017)
#1 Japan 237.6%
#2 Greece 181.8%
#3 Lebanon 146.8%
#4 Italy 131.8%
#5 Portugal 125.7%
#6 Sudan 121.6%
#7 Singapore 111.1%
#8 United States 105.2%
#9 Belgium 103.4%
#10 Egypt 103.0%
Note: Small economies (GDP under $10 billion) are excluded in this table, such as Cabo Verde and Barbados

Japan and Greece are the most indebted countries in the world, with debt-to-GDP ratios of 237.6% and 181.8% respectively. Meanwhile, the United States sits in the #8 spot with a 105.2% ratio, and recent Treasury estimates putting the national debt at $22 trillion.

LIGHT SNOW
On the opposite spectrum, here are the 10 jurisdictions that have incurred less debt relative to the size of their economies:

Rank Country Debt-to-GDP Ratio (2017)
#1 Macao (SAR) 0.0%
#2 Hong Kong (SAR) 0.1%
#3 Brunei 2.8%
#4 Afghanistan 7.0%
#5 Estonia 9.0%
#6 Botswana 14.0%
#7 Russia 15.5%
#8 Saudi Arabia 17.2%
#9 DRC 18.1%
#10 Paraguay 19.5%
Note: Small economies (GDP under $10 billion) are excluded in this table, such as Timor-Leste and Solomon Islands

Macao and Hong Kong – both special administrative regions (SARs) in China – have virtually zero debt on the books, while the official country with the lowest debt is Brunei (2.8%).

http://www.investmentwatchblog.com/why-the-housing-and-mortgage-crisis-is-far-from-over/


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