Os mais endividadas do mundo são...os dinamarqueses!! Eles juntos
com os suecos têm uma baixíssima renda média em comparação com outros países
avançados.
Por que? Ora, para que me preocupar com poupança se o governo me
dá tudo? Posso curtir a vida endividado. Países em que as pessoas têm de trabalhar para ter uma boa aposentadoria e ter os filhos em boas escolas têm renda média maior.
Leiam dois excelentes textos da Bloomberg.
O primeiro fala das famílias dinamarquesas endividadas. E diz coisas como:
Denmark’s
efforts to stop the world’s most indebted households
from building up more debt are starting to pay off as amortization rates
improve.
The Danish Mortgage Bankers’ Federation
says issuance of interest-only loans -- criticized by the central bank and
rating companies for posing a threat to financial stability -- has now peaked.
Danske Bank A/S, Denmark’s biggest lender, also estimates the share of
non-amortizing loans is set to decline.
“The trend is broken now,” Jan
Oestergaard, a senior analyst at Danske in Copenhagen, said in a phone
interview. “Depending on how interest rates move
going forward, I think we’ll see a lower share of interest-only loans.”
O segundo faz uma comparação das rendas médias entre os paísesavançados. Os três piores são Dinamarca, Suécia e Estados Unidos, nesta ordem do pior para o melhor. O texto diz coisas como:
To bring this back to the U.S., though, when you talk about wealth
and debt in countries like Denmark, you need to remember that residents of most
Western countries need a lot less in savings than Americans. Other countries —
and Denmark pretty much heads the list — have a much tighter social safety net.
That means less savings needed for emergencies, less for education, and much
less for retirement.
If you’re trying to understand where the
U.S. middle class fits in comparison to the rest of the world, any calculation
that leaves that out is misleading. Make no mistake: The U.S. does not do well
in median wealth calculations compared to most countries. Though a couple of
years old, this post from
Dylan Matthews addresses the
issue well. The U.S. ranks third-to-last in median wealth in a list of 19
wealthy countries.
The only ones below the U.S.? Sweden and
Denmark, which have famously comprehensive government income supports. On the
other hand, countries that rely largely on individual savings (Australia,
Italy, Japan) are way higher in the median wealth ranks. And more of the wealth
is held in middle-class savings, less in housing: In Australia, 56 percent of
household wealth is kept in retirement accounts and pensions, versus 27 percent
in the U.S.
In other words, the median Dane can rely
on the government. The median Australian has a healthy retirement account. The
median American has neither.
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Bom, é o velho: "trabalhe para ter e não depender de ninguém."
Um Estado bonzinho empobrece o povo.
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