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277 points cebert | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.945s | source
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PostOnce ◴[] No.44361768[source]
Theoretically, credit should be used for one thing: to make more money. (not less)

However, instead of using it to buy or construct a machine to triple what you can produce in an hour, the average person is using it to delay having to work that hour at all, in exchange for having to work an hour and six minutes sometime later.

At some point, you run out of hours available and the house of cards collapses.

i.e., credit can buy time in the nearly literal sense, you can do an hour's work in half an hour because the money facilitates it, meaning you can now make more money. If instead of investing in work you're spending on play, then you end up with a time deficit.

or, e.g. you can buy 3 franchises in 3 months instead of 3 years (i.e. income from the 1 franchise), trading credit for time to make more money, instead of burning it. It'd have been nice had they taught me this in school.

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andruby ◴[] No.44364438[source]
Do you also think that way about buying a house with a mortgage (credit)? I don't.

A mortgage isn't used to make more money. It's used so people can own a house after saving for a few years, rather than waiting until they've saved for a few decades.

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QuadmasterXLII ◴[] No.44365194[source]
I bought a house when I did because the interest on a mortgage was lower than any reasonable prediction fir inflation, which seemed a lot like free money; but at the time it felt a lot more like a dirty hack taking advantage of terrible government policy than any idealistic system where credit is used to bootstrap productive capitalization.
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1. phkahler ◴[] No.44365396[source]
Low interest rates tend to just push housing prices up. The average expenditure on housing as a percent of income have been nearly constant in the US for 50 years.
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2. haiku2077 ◴[] No.44371261[source]
Yes but I get to keep the equity in the house. I don't keep anything I pay towards interest.