Debt Serfdom in America
By Liaquat Ali Khan
November 11, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "HP"
- As of October 2015,
American consumers owe $8.17 trillion in mortgages, $900 billion
in credit cards, and $1.19 trillion in student loans. Home
mortgages, credit cards, and student loans occupy the most of the
consumer credit market.
The consumer credit market is the dream paradise
of money merchants, known as moneylenders. Just as pharma companies
sell drugs to make money by way of profit, money merchants sell
money to make money by way of interest. Note again, money merchants
sell money to make money. They sell money to millions of American
consumers needing to buy houses, cars, or home appliances. They sell
money to millions of American students becoming physicians, lawyers,
managers, as well as to college students. Big operators set up
banks, brokerage houses, and credit unions. Small operators run
payday loans and pawnshops. The rich and the wretched, the lord and
the tenant, teachers and students, men and women, all this and all
that, except the privileged few, are obligated, in one form or the
other, to money merchants.
Carrying debt has become a quintessential
attribute of American life. And creditworthiness, the ability to
borrow money, is the most valued personal asset an individual may
garner.
Credit monitoring companies gather information about an
individual's "bill payment history, loans, current debt, and other
financial information." Credit reports also inform money merchants
where the individual works and lives and whether the individual has
been "sued, arrested, or filed for bankruptcy." Losing
creditworthiness can have more severe consequences for an individual
than losing liberty, even body limbs.
Interest rates ranging from 3% to 30% lie at the
core of the credit market. After nullifying laws against usury,
federal and state legislatures have rewarded money merchants with
handsome legal names, such as creditors, mortgagees, card issuers,
and secured parties. In turn, money merchants use various "credit
products" to compose the ensemble of interest rates. They sell money
for fixed periods with structured payments, such as a 30-years
mortgage. They sell money as endlessly spinning Ixion wheels, known
as credit cards. These credit spinning wheels could carry an
interest rate over 30% for individuals with questionable credit.
Occupying all nooks and crannies of American life, the money
merchants have unbolted an ever-expanding credit juggernaut, much
larger than equity markets. The Federal Reserve Board controls the
interest-rate push button to modify the behavior of Pavlovian money
merchants.
Credit products are sold as fantasies of power,
comfort, and freedom. Owning a home has become the most heavily
debt-infested American dream. Living modestly with a less ambitious
spouse in a little prairie house (nondescript apartment) warmed with
children's love is old-fashioned foolery that might make sense in
Bangladesh or Kenya. Not here, not in credit-driven America. Here,
while the family is shattered beyond definition and while many
children putrefy in unsafe homes, money merchants keep enticing
Americans to dream big: Get it now and pay later. The virtues of
mortgage have been sold hook, line, and sinker -making breathing
difficult. Many people, by no means hypochondriacs alone, live in
enormous homes but fear homelessness, an eventuality that can befall
if you lose employment or medical bills pile up over and above a
life-threatening illness.
Credit cards are designed with much deliberation
as attractive nuisance - an object that attracts but hurts gullible
trespassers - as consumers wander into spending money they do not
have and might not have in the foreseeable future. Money merchants
want you to pay as little as possible, ideally no more than the
minimum payment due each month, so that the interest levied on a
larger unpaid balance may generate more money for money merchants.
Smartasses who pay off the entire monthly balance without giving a
single penny in interest defy the objectives of the credit market.
Money merchants want you to spend, hoard debt, and pay back on time
but only a little. The credit card ensnarement remains open for
one-way entry for the carefree, the underemployed, the young, and
the desperate.
The federal government itself becomes the supreme
money merchant when it comes to funding higher education. Student
loans are available from the
Federal Student Aid (FSA), "proud sponsor of the American mind,"
a slogan the U.S. Department of Education has trademarked with
propagandistic audacity and the FSA displays on its website. Student
loans are not interest-free, even though the federal government has
unlimited power to create interest-free money for students, as it
does for money merchants.
Currently, the FSA charges 4.20% interest rate on undergraduate
studies loans and 5.84% interest rate on graduate and professional
studies (law, medicine) loans. With college and university tuitions
climbing sharply, students are signing pricy debt notes to obtain
higher education and thus mortgaging future wages for a significant
part of life. Money merchants, whom law permits to create
interest-free money and who take hard-earned money from depositors
by paying marginal (0.02%) interest rate, also fund the American
mind by charging interest rates much higher than does the FSA. The
bankruptcy laws have been modified so that students cannot discharge
their student loans.
Higher education in many countries is free or almost free. Germany
provides tuition-free higher education, as does Denmark and Sweden.
India, which will be producing most college graduates in the world
in the near future, heavily subsidizes college and university
studies.
The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
which President Jimmy Carter signed in 1977, but which the Senate
refuses even to consider for ratification, obligates signatory
states to provide higher education "by every appropriate means, and
in particular by the progressive introduction of free education."
The United States, under the influence of money merchants, is moving
in the opposite direction of the Covenant making it difficult for
Americans to dream of becoming doctors, engineers, lawyers, and even
plain college graduates without signing a promissory note of debt
serfdom.
Liaquat Ali Khan - Founder, Legal Scholar
Academy and Professor of Law, Washburn University School of Law