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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

The World’s Worst Spendthrifts? Not Who You Think

Bloomberg’s Frances Schwartzkopff reports from Copenhagen on the scandalous behavior of the spendthrift Danes. Already the world’s most indebted people, the Danes are gearing up to borrow even more as their housing market heats up.

Wait a second. You are somehow not familiar with the reckless spending habits of Denmark? The wholesale betrayal of future generations by Scandinavia? Oh, right. You may be under the impression that it’s southern Europe that is burying its children under a mountain of debt. And Americans who just can’t recall what it means to live within your means.

Discussions about the European economy often turn on the stereotypes of the frugal North and careless South. In actuality, many of the stereotypes actually have things backwards.

Schwartzkopff’s story is a study in delicious understatement. She notes that the Danes built this debt up in a housing bubble, followed by a collapse, that many now owe more on their mortgages than their houses are worth … and that they’re happy to do more or less the same thing again. Danish “memories aren’t infinite,” one economist notes in Schwartzkopff’s article. Infinite here seems to mean “ 5 years.”

Above, a chart, compiled using Eurostat data, of household debt in Europe (with the U.S. added for comparison). Denmark is at the top, with debt at 267 percent of income. (Schwartzkopff says 310 percent; that seems to be based on a somewhat broader measure. In any case, it’s No. 1.) Danes have about twice as much debt relative to income as Spaniards–and more than four times that of Italians. Now look further down the list. Of the top six countries, only Ireland fits the the stereotype.

These numbers, it’s worth noting are for personal debt, not national debt. National debt involves years of complex (and often wrongheaded), government decisions. That, too, doesn’t always line up the way you’d expect–Spain’s government debt level is barely higher than Germany’s (and the highest government debt levels of all are, believe it or not, Japan’s). The numbers you see here are for the debt families take on. They go directly to the question of whether folks in some countries are more reckless with their money.

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