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I’ve
been thinking about credit. Actually I’ve been thinking about
accountability, Luca Pacioli, compliments/ insults, Orwell’s
opposites, sub-prime borrowers, and foreclosures. “We’ve trouble,
folks, right here in River City - with a capital P (payments) that
rhymes with C (and THAT stands for Credit).”
You
see, for months there have been rumblings in the distance that there are
financial problems brewing on the horizon for many American households.
It is only recently that the mainstream print and broadcast media have
begun to herald any forthcoming problems. This should come as NO
surprise since virtually every month for the past decade outstanding
debt has broached new record levels. We as a nation have been seduced by
a deluge of pre-approved credit cards, a flood of ever-so-tempting home
equity loans, and a marketing onslaught of buy-now and pay-later sales
promotions. Given how interest rates were cheap and (in many cases) the
annual percentage rates (APR’s) on Credits were below
“acknowledged” rates of inflation, this was like “free money.” Rollovers
ruled, and any thoughts of eventual accountability were
“back-burnered” into obscurity, or oblivion.
As
a CPA, CFE, and forensic accountant, I marvel at how the most basic
concepts of accounting and accountability are not understood by the bulk
of the populace one bit. Numbers and math are so often considered the
boring focus of geeks - far from it. If you put a dollar sign in front
of the numbers, you might pick up some more attention, but still
probably not a whole lot. However, when those dollar- denominated
numbers appear on a past due notice, a garnishment, or the notice of
foreclosure (or repossession) because of delinquency arrears; they
finally receive their just attention. It is only when the modern wonders
of the compounding of interest, fines, and penalties come home to roost;
that the full ramifications of them are finally understood on the
individual or household level - then… it’s too late.
There
is an underlying simplicity (and beauty) to accounting for anything. At
the heart of it all is that “debits must equal credits, debits
increase assets - while credits reduce them, and credits increase
liabilities - while debits reduce them.” We can
thank the Franciscan friar/ cleric Luca Pacioli for creating this
miraculous system of account balancing around 1494, a couple years after
Chris Columbus had set sail. The world was never the same, but how many
people really appreciate and acknowledge this revolution in
accountability. If anything, they have gotten it completely backwards!
How
many times have you said to somebody that you were giving them
“credit” for something – and meant it to be a compliment? Now…
TH*NK about that in terms of the original and ongoing “Pacioli
usage” where you are really insulting them. I mean… you are
effectively wishing their assets be diminished, and their liabilities be
increased. Some friend you are, right? This is perhaps the original
example of a doublespeak of opposites with which we are most familiar
from George Orwell’s 1984: where the Ministry of Love was really the
Ministry of Hate, the Ministry of Peace was really the Ministry of War,
and the Ministry of Truth was … you get the picture. Give me
“debit” for that, ok?
When
we receive those bulk mailings, when we receive those telemarketing
calls, and/or when we see those commercials hawking pre-approved credit
cards, mortgage debt refinancing, and/or debt consolidations; they may
be giving us Credit, but they are not giving us “credit” in any
positive sense of the term. I find it absolutely incredible to TH*NK how
when you find yourself stuck in hole, there are far more out there who
are willing to provide you with a shovel, than a rope.
In
recent years, the terms sub-prime borrower/ sub-prime lender have
entered our vocabularies. Talk about yet another example of a
doublespeak opposite. In banking/finance “prime” is a term of art
meaning highest quality. In the extreme, it means “we are more than
happy to lend to you, because you really don’t need the money.”
“Sub-prime” doesn’t mean not-quite-prime by any means. The
epidemic of “sub-prime” defaults has brought down how many
mega-lenders since the first of this year alone?
Escalating
foreclosure stats are now a daily topic of news and commentary from
virtually every section of the nation. This trend can only continue well
into the years ahead as these misguided policies of the past unravel and
unwind. I believe in giving full Credit to where “credit” is due –
and I don’t mean that as a compliment. I’m Fred Cederholm and I’ve
been thinking. You should be thinking, too.

© 2007 Fred Cederholm
Editorial Archive
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Fred
Cederholm
Creston,
IL USA
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