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USA Today: More Americans using credit cards to stay afloat

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-02-08 07:54 AM
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USA Today: More Americans using credit cards to stay afloat
More Americans using credit cards to stay afloat
Updated 2d 1h ago


Christie Carlson swipes her credit card at a gas station in Tomah, Wis. It's "just impossible" not to use credit cards, the 34-year-old single mom says.

Seven years in the credit-counseling business didn't prepare Ann Estes for the alarming trend she began noticing last fall: As her clients' mortgage bills became unaffordable, a growing number of them began paying their credit card bills before — and sometimes instead of — their mortgages.

"We've never seen anything like this," says Estes, who counsels clients by phone from her office in Richmond, Va. "Their homes are at risk, and they know it. But people say, 'I don't want to let my credit cards go because that's my cash flow.' "

Across the nation, credit counselors are reporting the same trend. Credit bureau analyses of consumer payment data show that financially squeezed borrowers have begun paying their credit card and car bills before their mortgages. That's a striking reversal from the norm, one that reflects rising desperation. It suggests that some people essentially have given up trying to stay current with their mortgages and instead are focused on using credit cards to squeak by.

If the trend persists, many economists say, it could accelerate mortgage losses and further drag down the economy.

Rising living costs, along with cheap and plentiful credit, have led consumers to rely more on plastic to pay for necessities they can't live without — and luxuries they don't want to do without. But as the economy weakens, consumers are starting to spend less on discretionary items, such as furniture and electronics, and more on such necessities as groceries and gas, according to government data. Such items increasingly are showing up on credit card bills.

"Everything's going up — dairy, gas, home taxes," says Christie Carlson, 34, a single mother of five children, ages 5 to 14, in Tomah, Wis., who enrolled in a debt-management program after racking up $20,000 in card debt. "I'm trying to pay more for everything in cash, but it's just impossible. It's not feasible right now to stop spending on the credit card."

During the past year, credit card debt has ballooned most rapidly in parts of the nation where the economy is particularly weak, including California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada, says Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com.

"That suggests that people are turning to their cards in times of financial need," Zandi says. "They're losing jobs and overtime hours and other income and trying to supplement their lower incomes with more spending on credit cards." ......(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.usatoday.com/money/perfi/credit/2008-02-28-credit-cards_N.htm



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KharmaTrain Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-02-08 08:29 AM
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1. The Other Shoe...The Real Ticking Time bomb
When I read that people are using cards more now as dollars get tight is both a shock and disturbing. I can relate...I once lost a job and tried to float through on plastic...maxing out in the process...and it took me nearly a decade to pay my way out of that mess. Thus, I can see how some people feel compelled to use cards and let the chips fall where they may...the kids need clothes, bills gotta get paid.

The other troubling news is one that's been long hidden and that is the large number of people who have debts far exceeding their net worth. The collapsing real estate market is really taking a toll here and for most, their home is their bigget asset and the drop in property values means the personal debt gets deeper. Add to this predatory lending rules that can hike a rate 2 or 3 times without notice and the crunch is deeper than ever.

For a long time, the banks have lived off the juice of revolving interest...prefering you to pay just a little and let the balance, and your overall debt, grow. Deadbeats are those who pay on time. Just like in the housing market, when people start defaulting on the cards, it's gonna be a flood...and the banks have few reserves to cover their asses. We're truly standing on the abyss of long lasting economic damage...and all this regime calls it is a "slowdown". It's no slowdown when you've been forced out of your house and spending nights at homeless shelters...as thousands of Americans do every night now.
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ThomWV Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-02-08 08:35 AM
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2. The reason for this is as obvious as the nose on your face
You credit card can feed and clothe you as long as you can keep it current. Your credit card can get you the gas you need to get to work to earn again. Your house can not feed or clothe you, it can't be used to buy gas to get you to work to earn again. Your house can not buy the shit that keeps your kid from screaming, your credit card can.
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