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Episode 489: Better off a Loan

Episode 489: Better off a Loan

Published 5 months, 1 week ago
Description

In this episode, we explore what it means to grant legal rights and who ultimately bears the cost when governments expand them, starting with Peru’s decision to recognize rights for stingless bees and moving into a broader discussion of negative versus positive rights. We examine labor shortages in skilled trades, the unintended consequences of vacancy taxes, and common misunderstandings about loans, insurance, and debt. The conversation then turns to credit scores, interest rates, student loans, and moral hazard, including how incentives shape borrowing behavior and higher education choices. Along the way, we connect financial systems to risk pooling and insurance logic, highlighting how policy decisions, incentives, and individual responsibility intersect in everyday economic life.


00:00 Introduction and Overview

00:29 Peru Grants Legal Rights to Stingless Bees

02:40 Negative vs Positive Rights and Who Pays

05:34 Peanut Butter, Welfare Logic, and the Road to Coercion

09:39 Ford Can’t Find Mechanics and the Skilled-Trade Shortage

13:02 Seattle’s Vacancy Tax and Unintended Consequences

18:33 Why People Misunderstand Loans and “Insurance”

19:58 Variable vs Fixed Rates and Paying Debt Early

22:27 Student Loans, Taxpayer Backstops, and Moral Hazard

24:58 Default, Walking Away, and Real Consequences

28:01 College Incentives: Engineering vs Liberal Arts

30:08 What a Credit Score Measures and Misses

31:29 Credit Utilization and Multiple Cards

33:56 Hard Inquiries, Store Cards, and Credit Score Hits

38:59 Interest, Mortgages, and Paying for Time

42:47 Why the Financial System Works Like Insurance

43:39 Sports Picks and Wrap-Up

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