Monday, March 8, 2010

Who's At (De)Fault?

An interesting article in today's Chron raises the questions about what happens when defaulting on debt no longer carries much of a stigma. Up to 25% of foreclosures are occurring because homeowners simply walked away from their home; something what was all but unthinkable for previous generations. For those with a talk radio viewpoint on this subject, the piece makes the notable point that it's not just individual homeowners who are walking away from financial obligations. Developers are abandoning multi-million dollar projects. And, of course, we all know about the Wall Street bailouts, which resulted from similarly reckless behavior, with consequences softened only by the government's golden trampoline. We'd be interested in hearing what readers think about everyone from homeowners to Wall Street brokerages getting into trouble from which they cannot recover. Has fiscal accountability become a national afterthought? And if so, is this a temporary phenomenon or a permanent shift in how Americans view debt and risk? Can the shame of being a welsher ever be recaptured? (I'm one quarter Welsh, so I think I can use that word.) Should it be?

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