Is it time for a debt Jubilee?

By Simon Wilson Jan 06, 2012

Simon Wilson

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Some influential voices are calling for an ancient solution to our modern economic problems – just write off all the debt. Could it work? Simon Wilson reports.

What’s a Jubilee?

In the Jewish and Christian traditions, a Jubilee is a special year marked by a forgiveness of sins, remission of debts and a universal pardon. In Mosaic Law (the Biblical law given to Moses and set out in the first five books of the Old Testament), a Jubilee was to be held every 50th year.

During the Jubilee, each household should recover its absent members; foreclosed land be returned to its former owners; indentured slaves be set free, and debts written off. (Leviticus 25 contains most of the instructions on property rights and debt, as given by God.)

What is its purpose?

To maintain social order and political stability – and, ultimately, protect the long-term sustainability of economic life and commerce – by preventing credit systems from degenerating into the enslavement of debtors by their creditors.

In his recent book Debt: The First 5,000 Years, David Graeber, an anthropologist who writes entertainingly of debt ceilings, subprime mortgages and credit default swaps as if they were the exotic practices of a decadent tribe on the edge of self-destruction, notes how the first act of many successful rebellions was to scrap debts and start again from zero. “Cancelling the debts, destroying the records, reallocating the land, was to become the standard list of peasant revolutionaries everywhere.” Jubilees were a way of pre-empting such social upheaval in a world where the collateral for debts was the very freedom of debtors and their dependants.

How did it work in practice?

Graeber describes how, in 2,400BC, the Sumerian king Enmetena declared “a general debt cancellation within his kingdom… the very first such declaration we have on record – and the first time the word ‘freedom’ [ie, the freedom of former debt slaves] appears in a political document”.

Indeed, the first word for freedom known in any language is the Sumerian “amargi” – meaning “return to mother”, presumably because enslaved children in particular were allowed to return home. A debt Jubilee is in this sense a recognition that economic life must be socially rooted if it is to be sustainable: in this case a recognition that if debts can’t be paid off, they won’t be – and that it might be better for everyone for the issue to be addressed peacefully rather than violently.

Who wants a Jubilee now?

A surprisingly broad range of people in the US. Graeber is a staunch supporter of the Occupy Wall Street movement. But there are also plenty of more orthodox voices who support the idea of massive debt relief as the only route out of a financial crisis and economic depression caused by excessive debt. Chief among them is the Australian economist Steve Keen. Keen warned correctly in the mid-2000s that the huge build up of private debt would cause an economic crisis far greater than those of the mid-1970s and early 1990s.

What does he say now?

That the sovereign debt crisis is merely a symptom of the real cause of the West’s economic woes – a catastrophic increase in private debt as a proportion of national income. As a result, the “debt-deflationary forces” unleashed today “are far larger than those that caused the Great Depression”. In the 1920s, for example, private debt in the US rose by 50%; in the decade to 2009 it rose by 140%, and the debt-to-GDP ratio is still far higher than when the Great Depression began. The key to averting a second Great Depression now is to slash private debt through a unilateral write-off of irresponsible loans made by banks. And Keen isn’t alone.

Versions of a debt Jubilee have been called for by a variety of economists and pundits (including the influential Stephen Roach of Morgan Stanley) who argue that federal policymakers should broker what in effect would be a grand out-of-court settlement between bond investors, banks and consumer groups – a “great haircut” to fix the underlying problem of excessive debt and jump-start the economy.

What’s the case against a Jubilee?

First, the cure might be worse than the disease, and there’s no guarantee that writing off debts would increase economic growth. As Martin Hutchinson and Robert Cyran pointed out on Breakingviews, “every liability is also an asset, so while a dollar that is no longer required for debt repayment might add some cents to consumer spending, it is also a dollar cut out of a bank’s capital or an investor’s net worth – subtracting from resources and confidence”.

In other words, any write-offs big enough to alter consumer behaviour would probably also be big enough to destabilise or even sink the banks. Second is the moral hazard argument. Writing off debts encourages future recklessness. Third, there’s the worry that international investors would see a Jubilee in America (or any other nation) as an attack on property rights in that country, prompting capital flight and doing more harm than good.

South Park economics 

Stephen Roach was arguing as early as last August that debt forgiveness would get consumers through “the pain of deleveraging sooner rather than later” and prove beneficial in the long run. The creators of the satirical cartoon South Park, however, tackled the issue even earlier.

In a March 2009 episode (Margaritaville), one character, Stan, gets a credit card with no limit and uses it to kick start the local economy by repaying everyone’s debts. Sure enough, everyone quickly starts spending again. “At the time, the idea just seemed like a funny satire“ on America’s economic mess, writes Jennifer Ablan of Reuters. “Now it seems like no joke at all.”

Comments (5)

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  • 1. Jasa

    (06 January 2012, 10:05AM)  Complain about this comment

    Seem to have omitted substantial elements of Prof. Keen's theory. He indicates all debts could be settled wi payment from central authority. Then all assets would be satisfied, but now devalued, much like we see now wi queasymoney however, there is no resolution to the underlying insolvency.

    There is no way that the western world can pay off all the outstanding sovereign & personal debt. If no debt jubilee we shall simply face increasing hardships, chaotic & disastrous defaults. The US has virtually smashed new & REVISED Debt ceiling, as of yesterday was just $25mn below the limit. The ECB balance sheet is now more bloated& loaded with toxic govt. debt from PIIGS than even Fed. Wi/out radical bold decisions this will end in anarchy for many societies, individuals will be wiped out anyway via rampant inflation.

  • 2. Jasa

    (06 January 2012, 10:06AM)  Complain about this comment

    We need a debt jubilee, global reset and a new money system and

    I do not mean SDR's which are simply another paper system, again open to abuse and easily destroyed by printing. Commodity based currency is the only way and this is why the Germans laugh at the UK. They have lots gold/commodities in Europe, Gordon Brown sold ours (WHY? WHY? WHY?) but at least I guess the BOE can confiscate any physical left in the ETF GLD and pay out stakeholders with soon to be worthless Sterling.

    2012 should be very interesting. Got gold miners in your ISA?

  • 3. Jasa

    (06 January 2012, 10:08AM)  Complain about this comment

    I agree that a debt jubiliee would seem unfair in that the frugal receive no benefit for responsible behaviour yet profligate benefit being asset rich. However the reality is that system is broken, & all will suffer. Manipulation of markets & govt backed corporate theft is rife, bankster bailouts followed by huge bonus payouts, transferrence of toxic debt onto backs of taxpayer, MF Global theft of customer monies, ECB repos of PIIGS debt in the secondary market, ECB & FED flooding the system with fiat. This will get worse and the consequences for Joe Public will become ever more dire. Loss of democracy and financial disaster coupled with increasingly strident govts. demanding tax, tax, tax, followed by use of pensions funds to buy soon to be worthless govt paper. The system has failed.

  • 4. 4caster

    (06 January 2012, 10:27PM)  Complain about this comment

    I supported a debt jubilee about a decade ago, in the context of some of the poorest countries also having become among the most indebted. For example the high lifestyle of Uganda's brutal dictator Idi Amin was only made possible by saddling the population and their descendants with irredeemable debt.
    Indentured labour also falls into this category: an illiterate man is misled into signing a contract which commits him to a lifetime's ill-paid labour, and his offspring and their offspring too, as soon as they can walk and use their hands.
    But most debtors in the modern world knew, or should have known, what they were taking on when they "withdrew equity" from their homes and spent the proceeds on exotic holidays or the latest electronic toys. I call it "consuming their houses".

  • 5. 4caster

    (06 January 2012, 10:30PM)  Complain about this comment

    (foiled by the 1,000-character limit again)
    Who does Simon Wilson want to pay for forgiveness of these debts? Bank depositors and shareholders, who would be wiped out? People who have lived within their means and saved for retirement? Or the poor, already downtrodden, taxpayers? Or a combination of all of these, which would be a triple whammy for the most responsible people?
    Sorry, but we don't want to get people spending and borrowing again. We want them to learn the merits of saving and investment and sound money. It will take decades, but nothing else will get the western economy onto its feet.

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