Standard Of Living Bubble

Categories: Econ

All around the economist's shop, the monkey chased the weasel...

Bubbles grow...then pop. That’s all good and fun for soap bubbles and bubblegum. Not so great for standard of living.

The standard of living bubble is the idea that people are living beyond their means for longer than a short-term period. It’s not sustainable, and requires going into debt. Think: credit card debt, personal debt, auto debt, and even mortgage debt.

If people are living beyond their means for an extended period of time, it’ll eventually catch up with them and collapse. All that debt adds up, and if your income isn’t rising to cover it, you’re going to find yourself in a pickle. Well, a bubble. And a pickle. Maybe bankruptcy, too.

While this could happen to anyone, generally people with good credit scores don’t end up in standard of living bubbles...you know, people with a good record of financial responsibility with debt. That means lenders are likely lending to borrowers with bad scores, maybe when they shouldn’t.

But...why? Well, ask the lenders that caused the Great Recession of 2008 that question. Long story short: they packaged a bunch of low-rate mortgages (borrowers with bad credit) into pretty packages with bows on top and pretended they were highly rated mortgages (borrowers with good credit). And they made bank doing it. And then got bailed out for doing it, too.

Borrowers, lenders, regulators...everybody sucks here. They all contributed to the "pop."

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Finance: What is a Bubble?5 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop what is ah bubble All right well

00:06

this is a bubble See what happened there got bigger

00:10

and bigger and bigger And then it popped and here's

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the stock market from about nineteen Ninety two until about

00:16

two thousand It got bigger and bigger and bigger And

00:19

then it popped And yet was a bubble not just

00:22

a big fat bull market It was a crazy ludicrous

00:25

tulip mania Kind of time like start ups with almost

00:29

no revenues trading and billions of dollars Yep And tulip

00:33

mania That was a really thing One tulip sold for

00:36

forty grand go figure wasn't like if you ate it

00:39

you lived forever So yeah it was a bubble So

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what caused the ninety nine bubble Well greed and it

00:45

wasn't good At least for some The internet had come

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along It was a new thing consumers by the millions

00:51

could download in the privacy of their homes Art films

00:56

Yeah That's what we'll call them art films by the

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terabyte money was flowing from silicon valley investors into startups

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at record pace hoping to take advantage of this new

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amazing internet thing and the valuations of companies got higher

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And higher and higher Nasdaq went up some four hundred

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percent in just half a dozen years and the blessed

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cos traded at one hundred times trailing revenue not earnings

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but revenue So if you think about the idea that

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if you invest a dollar and you want to get

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more than that back and that dollar comes from profits

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of companies than one hundred times revenues cos we're probably

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something like five hundred times earnings or more So for

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one hundred dollars oven investment you've got like a dollar

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of revenues in twenty cents of potential earnings Like maybe

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a a decade later maybe yeah that's a bubble and

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it burst At least you don't have that danger with

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actual tulips or bitcoins Yeah they take bitcoins when you

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buy tulips Would be kind of a good marriage there

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