- Mar 17, 2010
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Not only do you not know accounting, you don't know time value of money either.
1) The only way the bank could have a 20K receivable on their books, in addition to your 100K mortgage, is if you were delinquent on paying your mortgage for a couple of years
2) On a 30 year mortgage, you would be paying a LOT more than just 20K in interest. But that's over the FULL LIFE OF THE MORTGAGE. I bought a house with around a 250K mortgage last year. The bank has the exact same 250K mortgage on their books. . They don't just tack on 40 or 50K on their receivable 'just because'. Again, look up 'time value of money'
This thread is full of unbelievable fail and now i completely understand why conservatives exist.
Ok, I guess you can't understand simplified examples for the purpose of making a point. I'm fully aware that you don't just "tack on" X amount of money, but the POINT I was making was that the debtor's net value is decreased by the extra money spent on financing the mortgage which is not returned through the equity of the home (ignoring appreciation of the home). The lender sees an increase in his net worth through that extra financing cost, which becomes his profit.
Is that simple enough so that you can actually address the argument instead of the technicalities of the analogy?
