Re: Wealth Distribution
Thanks, JT. That makes sense -- it's what I thought you meant. I like the ideas you proposed.
The thing that occurs to me is that exponential growth results from concatenating linear steps, so as long as the rent for ladders is linearly proportional to the number of ladders, then the assets of a ladder-lender will still compound over time, even if the debt of any individual ladder-borrower doesn't compound. The lender isn't charging "interest on interest" to the individual borrower, but the lender's investment does compound across subsequent loans when he lends not only the principal from the first loan, but also the 'linear' interest. In that respect, it seems like there might still be potential for lenders to end up owning all the chips on the table.
Thanks, JT. That makes sense -- it's what I thought you meant. I like the ideas you proposed.
The thing that occurs to me is that exponential growth results from concatenating linear steps, so as long as the rent for ladders is linearly proportional to the number of ladders, then the assets of a ladder-lender will still compound over time, even if the debt of any individual ladder-borrower doesn't compound. The lender isn't charging "interest on interest" to the individual borrower, but the lender's investment does compound across subsequent loans when he lends not only the principal from the first loan, but also the 'linear' interest. In that respect, it seems like there might still be potential for lenders to end up owning all the chips on the table.
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