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Boomers most likely to buy a new car


               
2013 Aug 5, 8:27am   15,277 views  54 comments

by Heraclitusstudent   follow (8)  

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-08-05/automania-strikes-boomers-supplanting-kids-as-buyers.html

The 55-to-64-year-old age group, the oldest of the boomers, has become the cohort most likely to buy a new car...

The whole economy is build around the savingless boomers continuing their self-indulgent ways now like they were 10 years ago.

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51   anonymous   2013 Aug 6, 7:29am  

In the 90's, everyone and anyone was giving out loans, and it didn't take much if any documented income to get tens of thousands of dollars worth of credit. Seeing as how you can't purge school loans in bankruptcy court, the move was to pay off student loans with credit cards and personal loans, then pay a bk attorney with some of that borrowed money, to press the reset button for you.

52   Heraclitusstudent   @   2013 Aug 6, 7:31am  

Quigley says

That's actually what I did. Graduated with 50k debt, got a job in a hell hole in Alaska, and worked like an angry bastard for two years to pay it off. Then I worked one more year to get some FU money, quit, and moved to California debt free.

Congratz! Now you can go $500K in debt to buy a house from a boomer at inflated prices or you can crawl back to the "hole" in Alaska (probably less of a hole than California).
Wouldn't you say that's more or less painless?

53   drew_eckhardt   @   2013 Aug 6, 7:59am  

I'm pleasantly surprised that the world is starting to make sense.

In a sane world I'd expect people aged 55-64 to be buying the most new cars (average price: $30,748) since they're at the peak of their earning potential, have paid off their home loans, and gotten their spawn through college and out of the nest.

I expect children under 30 to be buying the fewest new cars since they've yet to max out their salaries, should be building an emergency fund of 12 months cash, are buying their first homes (median price $214,200), and if they've spawned or plan to should be saving for their childrens' odyssey years.

It used to irritate me when I saw younger people making less money buying bigger homes and newer cars than I did. Now I just smile knowing that I'll probably be working a few hundred hours a year as a hobby on the most interesting consulting projects like my father does until I get too tired and continue my middle class life style while they'll be forced to work full-time until later in life after which they'll have to scrape by on a fraction (Social Security can pay just 30%) of what they're used to.

54   dublin hillz   @   2013 Aug 6, 8:10am  

Heraclitusstudent says

Quigley says



That's actually what I did. Graduated with 50k debt, got a job in a hell hole in Alaska, and worked like an angry bastard for two years to pay it off. Then I worked one more year to get some FU money, quit, and moved to California debt free.


Congratz! Now you can go $500K in debt to buy a house from a boomer at inflated prices or you can crawl back to the "hole" in Alaska (probably less of a hole than California).
Wouldn't you say that's more or less painless?

It is always better to buy brand new from a builder than buy resale from a boomer. Always with no exceptions!

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