Submitted by rosetechnology t3_yk9nsx in dataisbeautiful
mehnimalism t1_ius54c5 wrote
You’re comparing a nominal amount to a rate. Dollar amounts naturally inflate and grow over time but a propensity doesn’t necessarily.
Misleading.
upboat_allgoals t1_iut0byd wrote
mehnimalism t1_iut33fk wrote
Certainly looks similar, just with a much longer timescale.
Regardless, loan total should be contextualized by adjusting for inflation, income levels, or something similar. It’s a similar argument to debt vs GDP — it means relatively little without understanding growth rate, ability to pay back, etc.
I will say on its own that’s an unhealthy CC debt trend.
gravityraster t1_iuucvyo wrote
Also the population grew by 17% over that timespan. This should be normalized to population size.
[deleted] t1_iusvc54 wrote
Dollar lost about half its value since 2000. Credit card debt is up 4x. So adjusted, 2x. Still scary.
mehnimalism t1_iut3koa wrote
Right but loan amount should be in context of income trends and total debt picture. It’s not the case, but what if incomes were up 50% over that time? Makes it much more manageable. Point is simply this is a comparison that leaves tons of room for lurking variables or misleading conclusions.
DaBearsManiac t1_iuunodb wrote
Disagree.
Savings rates are a much better monitor of the general population's cash-on-hand, since total savings amount can be skewed due to the amount of wealth held at the top.
This is telling us the amount of money saved as a percentage of total income.
This is against a graph of gross credit card debt.
Which, looking at its sharp rise against the collapsing savings rate, would suggest that people are having a harder time paying their month to month bills.
Which I think is evidently true.
That sharp uptick in 08 would far expand beyond an inflationary dollar values over just a 20yr period.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments