Margaret Atwood: Is Debt Necessary?

October 21, 2008 RSS Feed Print

This month's selection for the Alpha Consumer Book Club is Margaret Atwood's Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth. While Atwood may be most famous for her novels—including The Handmaid's Tale, which looks at totalitarianism—her most recent book explores why we think about debt the way we do. Why do we accept it as part of our lives? Why does it sometimes seem shameful? Why do some of us take on too much of it? Those questions are, of course, especially relevant now, as our entire economy reels from the days of easy credit and subprime mortgages.

Atwood begins with a story from her childhood. When she started earning money as a baby sitter, she opened a bank account. The interest earned on that account baffled her. She writes:

It was certainly interesting to me that I had some extra money—that must be why it was called "interest"—but I knew I hadn't actually earned it: no babies from the bank had been wheeled around in the snow by me. Where then had these mysterious sums come from? Surely from the same imaginary place that spawned the nickels left by the Tooth Fairy in exchange for your shucked off teeth: some realm of pious invention that couldn't be located anywhere exactly, but that we all had to pretend to believe in or the tooth-for-a-nickel gambit would no longer work.

Atwood goes on to explore the meaning of debt. "Without memory, there is no debt. Put another way: without story, there is no debt," she writes.

Then she poses this question: "Could it be that some people get into debt because, like speeding on a motorbike, it adds an adrenaline hit to their otherwise humdrum lives? When the bailiffs are knocking at the door and the lights go off because you didn't pay the hydro and the bank's threatening to foreclose, at least you can't complain of ennui." Rats, she points out, have been shown to give themselves painful electric shocks in order to avoid boredom.

After reading the book, these were some of my questions: Is debt a strange idea that we humans made up? Could we function without it? Should we try? And is it possible that some people seek debt out in order to make their lives more exciting?

To join the book club, all you have to do is read a copy of the book (or, for the Cliff Notes-inclined, read about the book) and share your comments, questions, and reactions below.

Tags:
books,
personal finance,
debt

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Starting a discussion with the assumption that debt is evil is flat-out wrong. Debt is a useful tool when it is used properly to speed up purchases that will help us make money now, whether we buy training or income-producing assets.

The problem is the "buy now, pay later" culture. Interest is the price we pay for the convenience of buying now. People stopped thinking about that price and blindly chose to live with a credit card balance as a part of their life. Car dealers know this and get people to focus on the monthly payment, regardless how long these payments last.

In short, people have trained themselves to mortgage their future for current gratification. This has nothing to do with thrills. We have forgotten the idea of delayed gratification because current reward is more certain and satisfying than future punishment. Ask any criminal.

JimmyDaGeek of MD 2:33PM October 25, 2008

Looking through history, I think debt has been around since day one -- but our generation has turned it up a million notches.

I understand her confusion as a kid over the money she "earned" in her savings account -- I grew up around working-class people who earned their money by producings tangible items (farmers=food; carpenters=buildings; mill workers=steel).

To this day it seems bizarre to me to "make money" in stocks, because there is nothing produced. I still, in the back of my mind, believe the only real way to earn money is to have something tangible to show for it, like real estate.

Single mom of CO 10:47AM October 24, 2008

For those who are interested, Margaret Atwood wrote an op-ed in the New York Times today on the meaning of debt- to read it, copy this url into your browser:

http://tinyurl.com/5ddkec

Kimberly Palmer of 12:36PM October 22, 2008

Alpha Consumer

Alpha Consumer

Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, is the author of Generation Earn: The Young Professional's Guide to Spending, Investing, and Giving Back. Send her your personal finance questions.


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