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Michael Waldmeier DMD, PhD's avatar

I suffered in the middle 1970's to the middle of 1980's with inflation causing my educational costs to soar and then interest rates to cripple my small business. It took 20 years for my net worth to build. As a youngster, houses in my parents' neighborhood cost $15-25k, in the expensive part of town the larger houses with larger lots sold for under $50k. Earning $4.50 was a great wage at Caterpillar which allowed a husband to buy a small house, have a family, and afford a used car.

Here in Frankfurt am Main, house/condo prices for quality and good location have tripled since I bought my condo and my wife bought a house and two apartments for rentals. We saved to pay for the properties.

If the inflation is gradually done, people will adjust and politically there won't be much discussion. I personally expect prices to be 3-4x to bring the debt/GDP ratio down to manageable levels. Anybody on a fixed income without Cost-of-Living increases will be squeezed.

Taxes for Government "Services" have increased and one has to be wary as to whether a university "education" is worth the price.

In summary, the financial situation for many Americans in 20 years will be far more difficult than when I was a kid. As a consolation, the US is in a better position than most European countries.

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Mark Heywood's avatar

This is an excellent article and written simply enough for Billy Joe Beercan to understand. A copy should come with everyone's pay stub this week. I am just waiting for them to have a bond auction and no one comes to the party.

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