FORTUNE MAGAZINE Value Driven by Geoff Colvin
Email | Print    Type Size  -  +

A return to thrift

Main Street should follow Wall Street's example when it comes to deleveraging.

By Geoff Colvin, senior editor at large
October 30, 2008: 5:44 AM ET

(Fortune Magazine) -- Sometimes it takes a near-death experience to change bad behavior. Think of your friend who quit Lucky Strikes after a coronary incident. Or look at how banks are reducing their dependency on debt after watching rivals go belly-up.

On Wall Street this process of reducing debt relative to equity is called deleveraging. Main Street should be deleveraging too.

Deleveraging is different for people than it is for companies, however. Big institutions are selling equity to pay down debt, but most individuals can do little if any of that. Their largest asset is probably their home, which they don't want to sell because they need a place to live, and in today's environment it may be worth less than the mortgage balance. So for most people the only way to pay down debt is to cut back on spending, or to use a quaintly antique term for it, be thrifty.

To realize how far we have gotten away from thrift, consider how those in the Greatest Generation financed the big purchases of their lives and how little cash the Facebook generation puts down for homes and cars or how comfortable they are with credit card debt. The present crisis could actually be the ideal moment to make thrift cool again, because debt has rarely been in worse repute.

Debt got us into this mess. Blaming the subprime lenders has become popular, and in some cases they were deceptive, but most borrowers knew perfectly well what they could afford. Millions joined in the debt mania, and now we're paying the price. Maybe American culture is ready to turn a corner.

It's an idea that's gaining momentum. The Thrift Project, a research effort by several think tanks, has produced a recent report ("For a New Thrift: Confronting the Debt Culture"), a book, and a traveling exhibit. Ronald T. Wilcox, a professor at the University of Virginia's Darden Business School, has written a book called Whatever Happened to Thrift?: Why Americans Don't Save and What to Do About It. The common message: America's debt addiction is seriously bad news for the country, and solving the problem requires action on many fronts.

The researchers of the Thrift Project believe we need to change our institutions. Most big banks are no longer very friendly toward small savers or even present in less than affluent neighborhoods. Meanwhile, state lotteries are depressingly effective at getting poor people to put their scarce dollars into essentially negative-interest "investments."

Wilcox believes we can use the findings of behavioral finance to entice people to save more - for example, by changing the default choice in 401(k) plans so that employees have to opt out rather than opt in. From that perspective, Barack Obama's proposal to let citizens break into their 401(k)s is a step in the wrong direction.

But it will take more than white papers and wonkery to change social norms. So what forces in today's society could be harnessed to make economizing admirable? A couple seem promising.

One is environmentalism: The mantra of "reduce, reuse, recycle" is a formula for saving money, while wasting resources not only is personally profligate but also harms everyone by hurting the planet. In Hollywood a Prius is far hipper than a Hummer.

Another force might be retirement anxiety: If you don't save enough to pay all your own bills, then you're forcing your kids and mine to pay them, and that's not right.

It's far from certain that focusing on any of this would work. The famous Harvard sociologist (and former Fortune staffer) Daniel Bell contended in The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism that something like the current mess was predictable; capitalism depends on diligent hard work but also on the promotion of hedonism and self-gratification to keep people spending, which eventually must corrode the ethic of self-sacrifice. The story, he felt, cannot end happily.

I'm not ready to give up on thrift just yet, because I suspect Americans are finally ready to embrace thrift today for a better tomorrow. If we do, and even if that causes a temporary hit to economic growth, I'm certain that we will be happier, saner, calmer, and ultimately much better off.  To top of page

Company Price Change % Change
Citigroup Inc 3.91 0.03 0.77%
Bank of America Corp... 13.50 0.22 1.66%
Ford Motor Co 12.07 0.36 3.07%
General Electric Co 15.39 0.24 1.60%
Microsoft Corp 24.29 0.35 1.46%
Data as of Sep 3
Index Last Change % Change
Dow 10,447.93 127.83 1.24%
Nasdaq 2,233.75 33.74 1.53%
S&P 500 1,104.51 14.41 1.32%
Treasurys 2.71 0.08 2.97%
Data as of 2:18pm ET
More Galleries
How will the job market evolve in the next decade? As we approach the Labor Day weekend, Fortune takes a look at some of the fastest growing professions in the U.S. More
3 fall travel deals In these three must-visit destinations, fall is shoulder season - which means fewer crowds and lower prices. More
An eyeblink glance at the economy The economy has grown for four straight quarters, but there are signs that the recovery is still fragile. More
Sponsors

Please create a screen name to access this feature.

Screen name (Select one with 3-12 characters; Numbers and letters only)


Forgot password

Enter your e-mail address below and we will send you an e-mail with a link and code to reset your password.

E-mail

Already have the reset code?

Password selection

E-mail

Reset code

New password

Log in & let's get started!

E-mail

Password

Forgot password?


Not a member yet?

Sign up now for a free account

Sign up or log in

Screen name

Select one with 3-12 characters;
Numbers and letters only

E-mail

Make sure you typed it correctly.
You will receive an e-mail to validate your account

Password

Make it 6-10 characters, no spaces

We're Sorry!

This service is temporarily unavailable. Please try again soon.


 

 


Thanks!

Please check your e-mail and click the link to confirm your membership. Then, you'll be ready to participate in all activities and conversations on our site.

Go to your Profile page


Newsletters
Market indexes are shown in real time, except for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes. All times are ET. Disclaimer
LIBOR Warning: Neither BBA Enterprises Limited, nor the BBA LIBOR Contributor Banks, nor Reuters, can be held liable for any irregularity or inaccuracy of BBA LIBOR. Disclaimer.
Morningstar: © 2010 Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer
The Dow Jones IndexesSM are proprietary to and distributed by Dow Jones & Company, Inc. and have been licensed for use. All content of the Dow Jones IndexesSM © 2010 is proprietary to Dow Jones & Company, Inc
Chicago Mercantile Association. The market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. and its licensors. All rights reserved.
FactSet Research Systems Inc. 2010. All rights reserved.