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Do you have any idea just how common credit cards are? Let’s take a look at a
few statistics from the USA.
The average family carries a balance of between $5,000 and $8,000 on all their
credit cards, depending on which figures you believe. Over $1,000 per family
goes on interest every year. And that’s just the average – some people owe much
more! Overall, Americans spend over $1 trillion every year on their credit
cards, and owe more than $500 billion of it.
If debt continues at the current rate, then one family in a hundred will be
forced into bankruptcy. Over 90% of Americans’ disposable incomes are spent
paying back debts. Whatever happened to saving?
Debt Costs Everyone Money.
Literally billions of dollars are being used up on expenses that are only
created because of the existence of the credit card industry. The weight of the
calculations, administration and marketing needed to support the industry is
immense – the average American gets at least one credit card offer in the mail
every day.
That’s before you take into account the burden bankruptcies put on the court
system, and the cost to the government of providing subsidised debt counselling.
You might also note that consumers with more debt have less to spend – and when
money isn’t flowing, it hurts the economy. There are very few industries or
people that aren’t hurt by debt, at least in the long run.
Debt is Much More Common Than It Used To Be.
It’s not so long ago that being in even a little debt was considered to be
absolutely terrible. When you wanted something, you saved up for it, and bought
it once you had enough money. If you had bad credit, you couldn’t get a credit
card at all. Go back fifty years and consumer debt figures were absurdly low,
the same way they are today in most of the non-Western world.
In the West, though, the art of saving seems to be a lost one – almost no-one is
saving enough for their retirement, and banks are having to offer ever-higher
interest rates to get people to put money anywhere near a savings account. We
have an ‘I-want-it-now’ consumer culture, and we’re willing to pay more than we
can afford to fund our lifestyles.
Spending Isn’t To Blame.
Now that I’ve said that, don’t think that the reason you’re in debt is that you
haven’t spent your money cautiously enough. According to statistics, it is very
rare for people to get into debt because they spend their money frivolously. Far
more people get buried in debt because they lose their job, or get sick – they
take out credit cards to pay for basic expenses, and fall into the interest
trap. Their debt spirals out of control from just a few thousand dollars
borrowed to pay for essentials.
Most people have a reasonable sense of what they can afford, and won’t go out
and use credit cards to buy things that they wouldn’t usually be able to pay
for. The problem is simply a matter of people leaving their balances on credit
cards for too long, not realising just how high the interest really is.
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