Originally posted by KrazyHorse
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The possibility of the debtor not holding his/her end of the contract is included in the contract price. It is just like the possibility of an accident being included in my price of insurance. If I am known to not keep my contract, if I have a history that suggests it, if something about me suggests that I will not be able to, then I will end up paying more for the contract (I will pay a high interest rate/etc).
I think it is the right thing to do to exit your contract if staying in the contract ceases to be advantageous to you. Note that this will obviously effect future contracts/etc.
Take for example the mortgages, since that is what interests people right now. A contract was drawn up. As surety for the contract, the house was provided. Therefore, if the homeowner can no longer keep the contract, then the mortgage holder gets the house and the homeowner exits the contract. If additional surety was desired, then that should have been entered into the contract. The fact that it wasn't, isn't the homeowners fault. The homeowner and the mortgage holder both expected the price of the houses to rise (or at least stay the same). If the housing market was robust you wouldn't have lenders being upset about borrowers exiting the contract in the mortgage industry.
JM
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