Credit card delinquency rates have reached record highs throughout America in the past few years. There are some factors that have helped contribute to this, such as the weakening economy, higher gas prices and other factors, but the issue is largely one of continued consumer misuse and misunderstanding of the fees that come with credit cards.
A deeper look inside the good, the bad and the ugly of credit cards may help you improve the way in which you use your own card, or help make the decision of whether you should go after a credit card in the first place.
Card Benefits
The benefits of credit cards are many. Obviously the main benefit is having a line of credit that allows you to purchase things in advance of when you would be able to otherwise.
Other benefits include the rewards programs that many cards offer, which can prove to be quite substantial depending on your usage of the card, and the fact that you can avoid carrying around large sums of money. They also some peace of mind knowing that you have an extra source of income should something unexpected come up.
The truth though is that credit cards are ultimately less than they’re cracked up to be. The simple fact is that through monthly or annual fees and interest payments on purchases, it eventually gets to the point where you’re borrowing your own money.
In the rush to get something a few months ahead of when you could’ve otherwise got it, you set yourself on a course for a lifetime of dependency and fees that will drain thousands of dollars from you by the time without fail. In the wake of the delinquency statistics, many people have failed to consider the fact that the credit cards themselves are the problem, and not so much the people using them.
Card Fees & Interest Rates
When fees and interest rates make consumer money all but disappear into thin air, we’re all the worse for it. The credit card companies get fat while everyone else suffers. Retail outlets that once thought credit cards were the greatest thing since sliced bread are now reeling as that credit debt has caught up with all those consumers and cut retail spending dramatically.
Credit cards are undoubtedly one of the main reasons for the weakening economy, and yet all people do to compensate for this is by taking on more and more cards and burying themselves deeper and deeper. Incredibly, as much as 15% of the population owns more than 10 credit cards. If this isn’t utter insanity, nothing is, plain and simple.
Just some of the many factors that contribute to the overall credit card debacle are yearly fees, outrageous late fees that can raise the standard rates by 2 to 3 times their original amount, sky high interest rates no matter the amount of money being borrowed, over-limit fees, and penalty rates. All leading to a lower credit score.
The one element that consumers are conned into believing is a benefit are the low minimum payments required. If you think the credit card companies are doing you a favor, think again. They want you to only make the minimum payment, this means you’re stuck paying them more money over a longer period of time.
This trend is so alarming that federal banking regulators have recommended the minimum payment required be raised to at least 1% of the balance in an effort to try and save consumers from themselves and the wily credit card companies.
So why get a credit card? Good question, one that not enough people have been asking themselves over the past decade. Take the time to ask yourself this before you jump into the fray that has left our country’s households in an average of $8,000 in debt.