Credit Card Debt Statistics: The Picture Is Far From Satisfactory

by William Blake

Although it’s not always good news, numbers can’t lie. Throughout the United States, Americans are racking up some very unpleasant statistics regarding credit card debt. This trend seems to have begun in the 1980’s, because it was during that decade that credit card use started to become more popular and eventually came to be a very normal way to make everyday purchases.

Additional Hard Sell Tactics

As reported statistics regarding credit card debt got worse and worse, credit card companies went on the offensive. They started to produce lots of advertisements, trying to entice new customers. Hard sell tactics started being applied and offers for credit cards now show up on TV and in the mail.

As these advertisements began to affect consumers, cash became a less popular way to make purchases, and thus, at least partially, credit cards led to the rise of information age. When computers took hold in society, so did credit cards. It also led to the less than desirable rate of debt that statistics now present, since during the 1980’s people used cash and checks less than credit cards.

Once credit cards had made themselves such a normal part of life, debts incurred from credit cards also became normal. Statistics on levels of credit card debt from that time show that most Americans were getting themselves into nine thousand dollars worth of debt annually, most of which credit cards were directly responsible for.

A common reason for such misuse of credit cards was that often the user mistakenly thought that he or she was using their own money when making credit card purchases.

However, the truth is that the money that you spend when using your credit card actually belongs to the credit card company, who are actually just lending you the money with the condition that you need to pay it back.

What’s more, such lending has an average rate of interest attached to using your credit card that works out to about fourteen percent, which anyone will tell you are a pretty steep rate of interest.

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