TheSlamma
Diamond Member
- Sep 6, 2005
- 7,625
- 5
- 81
I was making 5.25% interest in my ING account in 2004, as a saver that was a nice bonus that helped out a couple times a year.Income from interest has never been a meaningful part of middle class income. They have always been useless.
After this last housing bubble a lot of real estate investment companies bought up the forclosures, rented them out for 2 or 3 years and then when the economy got better they sold them.Who is selling you that house? Probably someone else in the middle class. They got a lot of extra money in their pocket.
Also sure that helps out the seller, but as we can see Millennials have no way to get the capital for a down payment cause 20% of 500,000 = bullshit. You sure you care about the middle class?
Those deductions helped me, I was able to use those tax refunds to make a decent principal payment each year on my mortgage to pay it off faster.Mortgage interest deductions are disproportionately accrued by the wealthy, so if anything lower rates are hurting richer people more. If you care about the middle class we should probably eliminate the mortgage interest deduction entirely.
Kind of my point, it's not helping us anywayLow interest rates have almost no effect on short term debt because it's exactly that: short term. Interest rates matter a lot for mortgages because you pay them off over 30 years. They matter little to credit cards because their balances change much more quickly.
The times I got laid off (DotCom) was actually cause easy to get loans allowed companies that should have never existed got loans they should have never been given.The primary benefit of low interest rates isn't your mortgage or whatever like that, it's the expansion of credit in the market that allows more aggregate economic activity to happen. So while your credit card APR might not be lower, you also might have been laid off without the low rates.