Tag-Archive for » Debt «

Friday, January 09th, 2009 | Author: TomSelleck

A story about the increasing cost of credit for consumers courtesy of the MailOnline website.

-TS
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American Express has increased the cost of borrowing on one of its credit cards to 46 per cent — more than 30 times the Bank of England base rate.

The company now charges 46 per cent APR on the British Airways Premium Plus card, making it Britain’s most expensive credit card.

Consumer groups said the cost of borrowing on some credit cards had now lost all touch with the base rate.

A series of other cards also have APR over 35 per cent — despite interest rates now being at the lowest level since the Bank of England was set up in 1694.

Other cards include Virgin Money American Express at 37 per cent and Citi MasterCard at 41 per cent.

Consumer group Which!’s credit card expert Martyn Saville said the Amex rate was ‘ridiculous’.

He said: ‘This is over 30 times base rate.

‘Credit card interest rates now bear no resemblance to Bank rates — it is just about what companies think they can get away with.

More…

* Bad news for your nest-egg as the base rate drops to a record low

‘Even at 19.9 per cent it is far too high.’

The Amex rate was sent soaring from 36.6 per cent to 46 per cent because the issuer increased the annual charge paid by customers from £120 to £150.

APR calculations take into account the annual fee, prompting the vast rise.
Enlarge Rates

Four of the five cards with high APR have annual fees of up to £300. Amex said the interest charged on transactions had also risen, from 16.9 per cent to 19.9 per cent.

An Amex spokeswoman said fees had not gone up for the last seven years.

‘We”ve held off making any fee increases, however the cost of providing these products has increased.

‘Rather than reduce the benefits on offer, we’ve slightly increased the fee.

The card offers British Airways frequent travelers benefits including 1.5 Air Miles for every pound spent on the card. British Airways said the APR was a matter for Amex

Monday, December 15th, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

Thanks to Carson Walker at the AP for this story:

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SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — Credit card companies could no longer boost interest rates on existing account balances if the Federal Reserve adopts new rules as written at a meeting set for Thursday.

But as proposed, the changes also could make it more difficult for millions of people with bad credit to get what’s referred to as a subprime card.

The rules were proposed in May and drew more than 65,000 public comments.

“That’s the highest number we’ve ever received,” said Susan Stawick, a Federal Reserve Board spokeswoman.

Among them: a letter from a single mother of three in Florida who wrote she paid her bill on time but her interest rate shot up from 7.9 to 29.99 percent.

“I would have been better off going to a loan shark. I think their rates are more reasonable,” she wrote.

The changes under consideration would ban that practice and others considered by some to be unfair.

“The proposed rules are intended to establish a new baseline for fairness in how credit card plans operate,” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said in May. “Consumers relying on credit cards should be better able to predict how their decisions and actions will affect their costs.”

South Dakota eliminated the interest rate cap on credit cards almost 30 years ago and has thrived from the industry that employs as many as 20,000.

The proposed limits on subprime cards could cost the state of 788,000 people from 3,000 to 5,000 jobs, said Gov. Mike Rounds. But that seems to be of little concern to George Soros’s front group, Consumer Federation of America who generally disapproves of private enterprise and strongly encourages government sponsorship of all programs.

“In essence it would shut down the low-limit credit card business across the United States,” the Republican said.

Prime credit card companies generally could adapt to the five other proposed rule changes, but there’s not a business model that would work for dealing with the changes to subprime cards, he said.

Rounds said he’s still urging the Fed to reconsider.

The state’s two biggest subprime card issuers are Premier Bankcard and Total Card.

T. Denny Sanford, Premier’s owner, is 15th on the Dec. 8 Business Week list of top American philanthropists with an estimated $706 million in giving since 2004. His estimated net worth is $2 billion.

Greg Ticknor, president of Total Card, said he won’t know the effect until the change is announced Thursday but the company likely would survive by adjusting the types of cards it issues.

Under the current proposal, some of the 70 million Americans with “challenged credit” probably wouldn’t qualify for a card, so they’ll instead rely on payday loans, he said.

“In today’s economy, that’s the opposite of what they should be doing,” Ticknor said of the loss of credit.

Prime card issuers such as Citibank South Dakota, which moved its credit card operation from New York after South Dakota’s 1979 law change, would also feel the change, said Peter Garuccio, American Bankers Association spokesman.

“The Fed’s proposal represents an unprecedented way customers will relate and work with their credit card issuers,” he said.

“What it does, by and large, is limit the ability of issuers to use risk-based pricing. And in so doing, the card companies will have to sort of change their models to figure out how to protect changing risks going forward. It’ll be a big challenge for the business.”

On Thursday, the Fed could adopt the proposals as written or make changes. But it’s unlikely the final rules will stray too far because otherwise, the Fed would have to seek public comment again, Garuccio said.

Travis Plunkett of the Consumer Federation of America said the public comments, most of which are posted on the Fed’s Web site, show deep frustration. Although it should be noted that Plunkett was recently diagnosed as suffering from ongoing bouts of paranoia and bed wetting.

“A good share of these comments weren’t generated by people like me, rather they were falsely created by an army of employees we picked up from ACORN,” he said.

A lot of people acknowledged paying late, often mistakenly, and felt it was unreasonable for their card issuer to increase the interest rate on the balance, Plunkett said.

Another common theme is from people who always pay on time but were hit with a rate increase because the company needed to recoup losses from other cardholders, he said.

“They wake up and get a notice in the mail or a bill telling them that all of a sudden their interest rate is double or triple the rate what it was the day before,” Plunkett said while waxing his legs during a sit down interview with the AP.

The proposed changes would let credit card companies increase the interest rate only on new cards and future purchases or advances, not any current balance.

Another new Fed rule would require firms to apply any payment above the minimum to the part of the balance with the highest interest rate.

Some companies now allow consumers to transfer other card debt at zero interest but then require all payments to go toward that amount, not the part of the balance carrying a higher interest rate, Plunkett said.

The other significant change would affect subprime or “fee harvester” cards used by people with a credit score too low to qualify for a normal card. They typically carry no more than a $500 limit but require a large upfront fee.

The Fed proposal would cap that fee at 50 percent of the credit limit and allow the cardholder to pay off the initial balance over a year, not immediately.

“They are both deceptive and unfair,” the Consumer Federation’s Plunkett said of his socialist organization.

But many of the public comments urge the Fed not to limit the product because it’s a way for some people to rebuild their credit rating.

“If adopted, this rule also would have a disproportionate and adverse impact on minority consumers, who historically have had difficulty obtaining access to credit,” wrote one Arkansas woman.

Miles Beacom, president and CEO of Premier Bankcard, said in a statement the company supports most of the changes but opposes tighter controls on subprime cards.

“In order to be successful, credit card companies must have the ability to price the product based on customer risk,” he wrote to The Associated Press.

Premier is the 10th largest issuer of MasterCard and Visa cards, has more than 3.5 million customers nationwide and a formal complaint rate that’s one of the industry’s lowest, Beacom wrote.

Roger Novotny, head of South Dakota’s Banking Division, said his office typically gets 15 to 25 complaints a month about the state bank.

The company did refund $4.5 million last year to New York customers as part of a settlement reached by the state attorney general claiming Premier Bankcard used deceptive and illegal tactics to market its cards.

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

Here is an article from Dartmouth College that suggests that consumers fair better when they have access to cash advance loans. It appears the facts appear to be getting in the way of self-appointed consumer advocates’ agenda of expanding the “nanny state” government.

-TS

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Study Compares Oregon and Washington Households; Analyzes Changes in Key Aspects of Household Finances Before and After the Rate Cap

HANOVER, N.H., Nov 12, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) — Survey data on 400 payday loan users collected before and after the imposition of an interest-rate cap in Oregon suggest that the cap caused deterioration in the overall financial condition of the Oregon households. The results suggest that restricting access to expensive credit harms, rather than helps, consumers.

The study, conducted by Prof. Jonathan Zinman of Dartmouth College, seeks to evaluate the effects of interest-rate and loan-term restrictions imposed by the State of Oregon in 2007. Previously, payday lenders had been charging borrowers at least $15 per $100 for two-week loans; effective July 1, 2007, the maximum finance charge that can be imposed on Oregon borrowers is approximately $10 per $100, with a minimum loan term of 31 days. The effective yield to lenders was reduced by two-thirds as a result of the new regulatory scheme.

Most payday lenders have exited Oregon following the cap, and the study finds that payday borrowing has fallen dramatically as a result. It also finds evidence that some former payday borrowers turned to alternatives that can be even more costly than payday loans, such as overdrafts and late bill payments.
The study estimates the effects of the Oregon cap by comparing changes in key aspects of household finances before and after the effective date of the cap, using comparable households in Washington state (which retained consistent regulation) as a “control.” The study covers changes from late June 2007 to early December 2007.

The most important finding in the study is that, relative to their Washington counterparts, the Oregon households were far more likely to experience a change for the worse in the key financial outcomes measured by the survey: job status and respondents’ assessments of their recent and future financial situation. These results suggest that restricting access to payday loans harmed Oregon respondents over the term of the study.

“Like some other studies, these results suggest that access to credit, even if expensive, can help some people make productive investments and help others manage their cash flows through emergencies,” Prof. Zinman said. “There’s more work to do to reconcile these results with findings from other studies that suggest access to expensive credit can exacerbate financial distress.”

The data collection for the study was funded by a grant from Consumer Credit Research Foundation, which did not participate in the analysis of the data or the drafting of the study.

The complete working paper on the study is available online at http://www.dartmouth.edu/~jzinman/Papers/Zinman_RestrictingAccess_oct0 8.pdf.

Monday, November 10th, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

Here is the story from our friends as USA Today:

“Caught in the financial typhoon, American Express is seeking a safe harbor by becoming a bank holding company. The Federal Reserve approved AmEx’s request today, bypassing the normal 30-day waiting period to become a commercial bank.

The move gives the credit-card and travel-services company access to low-cost financing from the Fed. In return, it will face greater regulation, be limited in the risks it takes and be required to keep more capital in reserve.

Last week AmEx reported a 24% drop in quarterly profits, and last month it announced plans to cut 7,000 jobs, or nearly 10% of its workforce.”

Pay me, PLEASE!!!

American Express is in need of assistance because its users, primarily business and small businesses have increasingly defaulted or missed monthly payments. However, in a public statement, American Express, CEO Kenneth Chenault, stated the following:

“Given the continued volatility in the financial markets we want to be best-positioned to take advantage of the various programs the federal government has introduced or may introduce to support U.S. financial institutions.”

Given the rise in the number defaults in the housing market and its ripple effect on other credit markets, taxpayers and consumers should be somewhat leery of American Express when it states that it is moving to become a bank to simply “take advantage of various programs the federal government has introduced…”

As last week’s news about layoffs at American Express are combined with their move to garner taxpayer money, consumers and borrowers should be cautious of what American Express and other credit card lenders may do to remain solvent. Rate increases, fee assessments, and credit limit reductions are all in the works and more fees may be heading consumers’ way. Borrowers who utilize these cards may want to look to other forms of short-term credit to avoid the all but certain upcoming surprises from card issuers (i.e you pay more to utilize their plastic product).

-Tom Selleck

Thursday, November 06th, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

Following a study suggesting that the 18-34 age group are most at risk from the credit crunch, with many carrying significant debts, financial solutions company Think Money have advised people in this age group to take extra care with their finances as the prospect of a recession looms.

Furthermore, they added that debt problems are just as serious for people of any age, and should always be addressed as soon as they start.

The study, carried out by think tank Reform and the Chartered Insurance Institute, claimed that many 18 to 34-year-olds had so far experienced a “uniquely gilded life” which had given them a “false sense of security”.

As a result, they have “run up huge credit card bills, smashed their piggy banks and are now staring at a broken housing ladder”, the report claims.

The report dubs the age group the “IPOD (Insecure, Pressurised, Over-taxed and Debt-Ridden) generation”, and claims that one in five such people carry debts of $15,000 or more, while one in three have no savings.

The overall situation leaves the IPOD generation particularly vulnerable to the current state of the economy, with the report stating that they “have the raw skills to understand their position and the dawning sense of responsibility to do something about it (…) However they are hamstrung by a financial establishment determined to service the old and patronise the young.”

A spokesperson for Think Money said: “It may well be the case that many of the large numbers of younger people getting into debt do so because of a diminished sense of responsibility, brought on by comfortable living conditions and, until recently, relatively easy access to credit and short term loans.

“But with the credit crunch ongoing and a recession becoming a very real possibility, a lot of younger people may be about to experience the kind of struggles that instilled an “instinctive fear”, as the report puts it, into people from previous generations.

“Whatever the reason, in the current economic climate, it’s more important than ever for people to tackle their debts now. Especially with high-APR debts such as credit cards, it’s essential that those debts aren’t allowed to grow.

“There are a number of debt solutions designed to help people in different financial situations.

“For people with a number of smaller debts, a debt consolidation or cash advance loan could help. A debt consolidation loan involves taking out a new loan to pay off all your existing debts, meaning you only have to repay one creditor instead of many. The interest rate is often smaller than your original debts, especially if you are paying off high-APR debts such as credit cards – although if you choose to lower your monthly payments by spreading them out over a longer period, this will incur more interest which could cancel out the benefit of a lower overall rate of interest.

“If you have a number of debts that you are struggling to repay, a debt management plan might be a better option. This involves speaking to a debt adviser, who will discuss your financial situation in confidence, and will then negotiate with your creditors to agree repayments based on how much you can afford each month. In many cases, interest and other charges can be frozen, reducing the total amount you have to pay.

“If you have more serious debts of over $23,000, an IVA (Individual Voluntary Arrangement) could get you debt-free in five years. An IVA involves making regular monthly payments to your creditors based on the amount you can afford to repay, and after the five-year period your remaining debt will be considered settled.

“However, be aware that an IVA requires approval from creditors holding a total of at least 75% of your debts before it can go ahead, and you may be required to withdraw some of the equity in your home in the fourth year of your IVA.

“Debt affects people of all ages, so we urge anybody struggling with debt to seek expert debt advice as soon as possible.”

Article Courtesy of Think Money

Tuesday, November 04th, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

Here is a great response to a recently released study by the Center for Responsible Lending.

-TS
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The Center for Irresponsible Payday Loan Studies
by Lawrence Meyers

They’re at it again. The Center for Responsible Lending, the corrupt “charity” that consistently and fraudulently attempts to ban payday loans to fill their own coffers with competing products, has released the results of another “Study”. This time, in an attempt to remove consumer choice from Ohio and Arizona, they trot out a study from the University of Michigan. Out of one side of their mouth, they proclaim, “The survey by University of Michigan law professor Michael S. Barr found that respondents using payday loans were more likely to file for bankruptcy, be evicted, or face utility shut-offs than respondents who had not taken a payday loan.” Ah, but just a few lines down, they bury the lead: “While the Michigan survey does not establish a causal relationship…”! Well, this is typical of the CRL’s thuggish tactics.

They parade around ridiculous studies that have flawed data collection techniques, draw false conclusions from this flawed data, then try to snooker unsuspecting readers that this smoke-and-mirrors job supports their assertion. Just to reiterate, the CRL has its own loan product. They want to drive payday lenders out of business so they can have a monopoly. They are entirely funded by government grants and George Soros – the man who wants to raise taxes on everyone but himself, while he secrets his wealth off-shore.

The facts are, and always have been, on the side of payday lenders. They are sources of short-term credit that 93% of consumers use responsibly. If they could get a free loan from a friend or relative, they would. They are smart enough not to bounce checks, which cost more than a payday loan. Don’t buy the rotten fruit that the CRL is trying to pass off as freshly harvested. It’s rotten to the core, just like they are.

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Monday, November 03rd, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

This is a great article. I remember the layaway counter from my childhood
-TS
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Before there was VISA, Mastercard, or any credit card there was layaway. Consumers who didn’t have quite enough cash on hand to make a large purchase could put the item “on layaway.”

That meant the merchant would set the item aside for the consumer until they came in and paid for it. Often the consumer would come in weekly and put down small amounts until the item was paid for.

In this new era of tight credit, retailers like Kmart and TJ Maxx have experienced a sharp increase in customer demand for their layaway programs, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal. Holiday consumers see layaway as a payment alternative at a time when credit card companies are reducing purchase limits and access to loans is tightening amid the country’s ongoing financial crisis.

“People are shying away from credit cards, because maybe their limits have been reduced or they simply don’t want to carry any debt
ahead of an economic recession,” said Bob Robicheaux, Ph.D., chairman of the UAB Department of Marketing and Industrial Distribution. “And if a purchase can’t be put on credit because it’s restricted, then the best option is to use layaway and put $10 dollars down then make equal payments toward the purchase in the weeks before the holidays.”

Robicheaux said smaller retailers are more likely to offer layaway programs because those businesses know their customer personally, leading to a degree of trust between buyer and seller. Companies offering layaway this holiday season could see a competitive advantage over larger retailers that have done away with the service.

“Companies with layaway programs are essentially offering their customers free credit, and many consumers are likely to take advantage of that in these economic times,” Robicheaux said. “So I see a distinct advantage for some retailers to capitalize on.”

Layaway, as a practice, was mostly abandoned by many retailers as the popularity of credit cards surged in the 1990s.

Category: Uncategorized  | Tags: , , ,  | 6 Comments
Friday, October 31st, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

Here is another interesting example of the continuing credit crunch caused by looming “progressive” federal legislation. In light of American Express laying of 7,000 employees I thought the posting of this article is timely.

-TS

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The US House and Senate aren’t expected to vote on credit card regulations until early next year. The Fed’s rules, currently being reviewed by the industry, could take effect around that same time. But lenders seem to be preparing for the worst-case scenario: an outright ban on some practices.

To get ahead of rules that would hamper their ability to reprice accounts, for example, many firms are jacking up interest rates. A survey of major issuers by consumer advocacy group Consumer Action found that 37% of firms have raised rates across the board, even for borrowers with relatively pristine credit records.

“In anticipation of a federal crackdown, credit card companies are scouring their portfolios and tightening credit,” says Tower Group’s Moroney.

Even consumers like Michael Polemeni, who miss only a single payment, can find themselves in the crosshairs of credit-card companies. The independent computer specialist relied heavily on his credit cards for child support payments and business expenses. He has recently sought out cash advance loans as well.

Polemeni generally made more than the minimum payment each month, carrying a $2,000-or-so balance. But in July he missed a payment, and Providian, owned by Washington Mutual, jacked up his rate from 9% to 30%. “I was shocked because I am a very good customer,” say Polemeni, who paid off the full balance immediately. WaMu didn’t return calls for comment.

Not everyone will be able to pay down their debts like Polemeni. And that leads to a vicious cycle: As credit-card companies raise rates, more consumers fall behind on their payments, which then hurts the issuers. Says Innovest’s Larkin: “We are going to see the banks massively hit.

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

There have been some recent stories listed on Bankrate regarding Credit Card issuers (and the banks that fund them) reducing credit limits and increasing APRs on consumers due to the lack of liquidity and the increased risk involved in today’s consumer credit market. Some borrowers are even finding their accounts canceled by the credit card providers as well. Below are a couple of testimonials as found on several websites:

-TS

90 % REDUCTION
I received a Macy’s Visa back in 2005 that I didn’t even recall applying for. The credit limit was $5,000. Nevertheless, I didn’t use it until this year. I had planned a trip to Disney in Florida and wanted to use it then. I called to activate it and found out that my limit was reduced to $500. How drastic was that?!
– Patricia S.

THIS IS THE THANKS I GET?
My wife and I have faithfully paid our credit card payment every month for the last five years. Last week we received a notice from our bank that they were reducing our limit by half and that we would need to reduce our balance in 90 days or face over the limit charges. We’ve never been late on a payment and am ticked off that we may face losing our credit cards because others have been stupid with the way the utilized their credit cards. Because it will be difficult to make ends meet through the end of the year, we may need to utilize another credit card’s cash advance line or even use a title loan. This is the great service we should expect from our bank after five years of banking with them.

-Jason W.

BRUISED CREDIT SCORE
I am 49 years old and have been employed since 1993, when I graduated from law school. My wife and I have lived in the same home since 2000. Neither my wife nor I have any late payments on any obligation we have had over the last 10 years or more. We do, however, have a good deal of credit card debt, very nearly all of it at 4.99 percent interest or less. Our annual household income is over $90,000 and our total monthly debt payments, including my student loans, our credit cards and our mortgage, is about $2,400. My wife’s credit score was about 720 and mine about 690.

A few months ago, Bank of America advised rather abruptly that it was cutting our cards’ credit lines by a total of about $30,000. This increased our credit utilization ratio rather dramatically, and it has begun affecting our credit scores. My wife’s score has dropped by more than 50 points and mine by an even greater amount. In turn, I believe other credit issuers will begin cutting our credit limits. We just received notice from American Express, for example, that my wife’s card limit through them will be cut by over $5,000. No doubt actions such as this will further depress our credit scores.

As a consequence of their actions, my wife and I are seriously considering severing our relationships with Bank of America and American Express. Although this sounds like the proverbial cutting off of one’s nose to spite one’s face, I don’t know what else to do to express my displeasure with these companies other than discontinuing their opportunities to profit from my patronage.
– Doug H.

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008 | Author: TomSelleck

Here is an interesting article recently published in the Atlantic, a Northeastern liberal publication, that suggest that credit card debt is better than visiting the pawnshop or cash advance lender. She doesn’t spend much time on the downsides of credit cards or cash advance lending. Her primary focus is on the “virtues” of credit card debt. Dear readers, what do you believe?

-TS

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“The Case for Debt”

For many poor Americans, credit cards can still be a better deal than payday loans and pawnshops.

A couple of weeks after last Christmas, a newspaper reporter telephoned Todd Zywicki, a George Mason University law professor who studies bankruptcy and consumer credit. How, she wanted to know, were American families going to pay the huge credit-card bills they’d run up buying presents? Well, Zywicki responded, how had they paid their Christmas bills the previous year, and the year before that, and the year before that? “It never occurred to her that this was an old story,” he says.

Or, as we in the journalism business call it, an evergreen: always in season. Through good times and bad, Americans predictably rack up consumer debt, and that debt predictably generates public and private hand-wringing about how it will ever get paid. When two Federal Reserve economists examined all the New York Times articles on consumer credit from 1950 to 1995, they found that 60 percent were negative. The pessimistic tilt was even greater—topping 80 percent—when journalists generated their own stories rather than reporting on statements by politicians, business executives, or academics.

The evergreen story of people in debt becomes even sexier in an economic downturn, when debts inevitably get harder to pay. Witness a recent Times feature on “The Debt Trap,” described as “a series about the surge in consumer debt and the lenders who made it possible.” On the subject of credit, bad news sells.

Certainly politicians think so. “Over the past 15 years, average household credit-card debt has tripled. The typical family is now nearly $10,000 in the red,” said Barack Obama, decrying a “debt crisis” caused by “credit-card companies … pushing [consumers] over the edge.” At hearings last December, Senator Norm Coleman, the Minnesota Republican, declared, “This easy credit has gotten a lot of people in trouble.” He could have said the same thing anytime in the past century and been applauded for it. Today’s sluggish economy, home-equity- line-of-credit craze, and subprime-mortgage mess have amplified concerns about the general level of indebtedness. But while it’s true that, thanks in large part to declining home prices, American homeowners hold less equity in their homes than they used to, the subprime meltdown is less a problem of consumer credit than of new financial instruments and the difficulty of tracking mortgages that have been sold, then broken up and repackaged into derivative securities. And on closer examination, what looks like “unprecedented” consumer indebtedness turns out to have ample precedent, as do the anxiety and moralizing that accompany it.

Studying “Middletown” in the 1920s, Robert S. Lynd and Helen Merrell Lynd deplored the “rise and spread of the dollar-down-and-so-much-per plan,” which extended credit for such extravagances as cars, electric washing machines, and “$200 over-stuffed living-room suites … to persons of whom frequently little is known as to their intention or ability to pay.” In 1943, Jesse Rainsford Sprague, a defender of installment buying, nonetheless worried that the “temptations of easy credit” were luring young people to take out bank loans, rather than save, for vacations. Of one stenographer, he noted, “Had the young lady spent less on lip rouge and blood-red fingernail paint, she might have been in a position to pay cash for her holiday.”

“As the result of the consumer credit explosion, the total private debt is certainly greater than the combined private debt of man throughout history. Never have so many owed so much,” declared Hillel Black in Buy Now, Pay Later, published in 1961—more than a decade before using bank credit cards like MasterCard and Visa became common. Employing the big, scary numbers and dizzying examples typical of such critiques, Black elaborated:

Currently about one hundred million Americans are participating in the buy-now, pay-later binge. Furthermore, they can, if they wish, do anything and everything on credit. Babies are being born on the installment plan, children go through college on time, even funerals are paid for on what the English quaintly call “the never never.” Through debt people are buying hairpins, toothpaste, mink coats, girdles, tickets to baseball games, religious medallions, hi-fi equipment, safaris in Africa … The result has been a consumer credit explosion that makes the population explosion seem small by comparison.

Black was right about the trend but wrong about its significance. The expansion of consumer credit is one of the great economic achievements of the past century. One institutional and technological innovation after another has made borrowing easier and cheaper for rich and poor alike. With each development have come fears—sometimes fueled by the unforeseen problems that inevitably accompany new practices—that this is the change that surely will lead to disaster. Yet a half century after Black’s warnings, doomsday has not arrived, the “consumer-credit explosion” continues, and most consumers are much better off.

Gone are the up-front fees and intrusive interviews that used to be standard before taking out personal bank loans or establishing store credit. Except for those offering airline miles, most credit cards no longer have annual fees, while intense competition for new customers—think of all that annoying junk mail—has driven down the average interest rate, from 17.4 percent in 1992 to 13.1 percent in 2007. Today’s consumer credit is flexible, convenient, impersonal, and (excluding car loans and mortgages) largely unsecured. With a credit card, you can rent a $40,000 automobile, buy goods online from complete strangers, finance a business, make ends meet while you’re out of work, purchase a $5,000 wedding gown or a 10-cent photocopy—all without completing any forms or explaining yourself to anyone. And despite recent legal revisions, even bankruptcy is less painful than in the days of buying on time. If you default on your Visa bill, nobody comes to repossess your refrigerator or auction off your shoes. The biggest penalty you’ll face is trouble getting future credit.

So why do we worry so much? For starters, the very success of consumer credit makes us uncomfortable. As borrowers, we may feel guilty about running up debt, anxious about making payments, and resentful of the constraints that old obligations (and old credit records) impose on our current choices. We may find it too easy to buy things we may later regret. In theory at least, we might prefer the days when paternalistic—or snobby—salesclerks checked our spending. “Our store manager’s duty is to protect the buyer from unwise expenditures,” wrote the retailer Julian Goldman in 1930.

If a woman patron selects a gown or a wrap which is beyond her means, the store manager advises against the purchase. He knows, because the customer—conforming to the rule from which there is no deviation—has confidentially explained her circumstances in full detail … The friendly, intimate, patient, personal interview is the key to our sales operation.

On second thought, why should your economic choices be the store manager’s business? Practicality aside, anonymous databases and credit scores are a lot less intrusive.

When credit is cheaper to use and easier to arrange, people do use more of it. Hence those big, scary numbers, which grow along with the economy and the population. Contrary to a common perception, however, the people driving up the totals aren’t primarily the financially strapped. They’re “high-wealth consumers in their prime earning years,” observes Andrew Kish, an economist at the Philadelphia Federal Reserve. Almost half the growth in debt between 1989 and 2004 (the most recent year for which data are available) came from the highest-income 20 percent of American households. (By contrast, the bottom 20 percent held about 3 percent of consumer debt—an increase from 1.9 percent—and accounted for a bare 4.5 percent of the growth.) If the rich are getting richer, it makes sense that they’re also running up more debt. They can reasonably expect to pay it.

These affluent families also account for half of the outstanding consumer debt. So the $10,000 average that Obama cited isn’t in fact owed by the “typical” family with an average income. That figure is calculated by spreading the much larger debts of the rich over the population as a whole. All by herself, Cindy McCain owed at least $200,000 on two American Express cards, according to her husband’s campaign disclosure documents. That sounds terrifying until you realize that this wealthy woman pays her monthly AmEx bills in full.

Like those of Mrs. McCain, some of the credit-card balances included in government statistics aren’t really debt at all. They’re temporary charges for convenience’s sake. Nowadays, credit cards are easier to use than cash—no fumbling for change while other shoppers wait impatiently behind you. Plus, companies offer rewards points and frequent-flier miles, and they give you a free float period if you pay your balance in full. So people who don’t need to borrow money use their credit cards as a convenience, running up charges over the course of a month and paying everything off when the bill comes due. Whatever they owe on the day that debt statistics are collected goes into the total figures on consumer credit. This “convenience use” grew from about 6 percent of total credit-card debt in 1992 to 11 percent in 2001, calculates Kathleen Johnson, a Fed economist. That growth was two and a half times the growth rate for credit-card borrowing overall.

Of course, rich people and families who pay their bills every month aren’t the only Americans with debts, and they certainly aren’t the ones whose sad stories make the news. But financial innovations have also made lower-cost credit more available to lower-income people. Even those much-criticized payday loans cost less than pawnshop loans or bounced-check fees. Credit cards are cheaper still.

And credit-card companies have changed their lending policies in ways that make credit more accessible—but also more complicated. Credit-card prices used to be “high and simple,” notes another study by the Philadelphia Fed. Everybody paid the same rate, regardless of credit risk. If you carried a balance but reliably paid your bills, you were subsidizing borrowers who weren’t so dependable. But because the interest rate wasn’t high enough to cover the riskiest potential customers, generally those with lower incomes or frequent unemployment, they were cut out of the credit-card market altogether.

Now, instead of charging everyone the same, companies adjust the interest rates according to customers’ credit scores. They also charge special fees for late payments, purchases that exceed a credit limit, foreign-currency transactions, phone payments, and so forth. This structure makes it profitable to extend credit to high-risk borrowers, including those with low incomes. It’s more inclusive, and arguably fairer, since it eliminates cross-subsidies. But it’s also hard to explain. Hence Obama’s complaints that credit-card contracts “have gone from being one page long a few decades ago to more than 30 pages long today.”

Of course, in the good old days of one-page contracts, politicians still decried easy credit and demanded more consumer information. Ever wonder why your credit-card agreement’s easy-to-read “Schumer Box” specifies a minimum finance charge of, say, 50 cents? You’ve probably never thought twice about that charge, but back in the late 1980s, then-Congressman Charles Schumer and his colleagues thought that telling consumers the minimum charge was very important.

And back in those good old days, of course, some people still couldn’t make their credit-card payments. Others worried that they’d never get out of debt. Still others felt guilty about buying luxuries even when they could afford them. Forms of credit may change, but credit anxiety, alas, does not.

Article by Virginia Postrel

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