Posted on 07/05/2006 5:39:20 AM PDT by Hydroshock
Rising Interest Rates, Higher Gasoline Prices Make It Harder for Consumers to Handle Debt
NEW YORK (AP) -- Rising interest rates and higher gasoline prices are putting the squeeze on consumers' budgets, and many are finding it harder to keep up with their bills. Credit counseling agencies say that consumers are coming in in droves seeking help. ADVERTISEMENT
"My phones are going crazy," said Howard Dvorkin, president of the nonprofit Consolidated Credit Counseling Services Inc. in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "Consumers are carrying an exorbitant amount of debt -- and they don't have any savings to fall back on if things don't go right."
An important measure of consumer financial distress, late payments on credit cards, ticked up in the first quarter, according to figures from the American Bankers Association. The Washington, D.C., based trade group said the percentage of bank cards 30 or more days past due increased to 4.40 percent in the January-March quarter from 4.27 percent in the final quarter of 2005.
The Federal Reserve's decision last week to raise short-term interest rates for the 17th consecutive time will boost yet again borrowing costs for consumers, likely prompting more delinquencies on credit card bills -- as well as on auto loans and mortgages.
The slowing economy also is depressing income growth, so a greater percentage of take-home pay is going toward necessities and less is left over for debt payment.
Among the consumers who recently put a call into Dvorkin's counseling center was Andreia Marshall, an assistant project manager for a builder in Delray Beach, Fla.
Marshall said that after she broke up with her boyfriend, her paycheck wasn't big enough to cover her apartment rent, higher gasoline prices and other day-to-day expenses. Soon she started falling behind on her credit card bills.
"It got to the point where the credit card companies were calling," she said. "It's overwhelming, you feel as if you're drowning and you feel bad about yourself."
With help from a credit counselor, Marshall is working out a budget and whittling down her $13,000 in card debt, which she figures could take 3 1/2 years.
"I have to think about everything I spend," she said. "Sometimes in the grocery, I have to say to myself, 'Do you really need to buy this?' And I'm looking at things like, how can I not spend $80 on dry-cleaning."
Marshall said that instead of feeling deprived, she's feeling good about it.
"I'm proud about what I'm doing," Marshall said. "I'm paying that debt and getting educated, and I know I won't make the same mistake again.'"'
Catherine Williams, a credit expert with Money Management International, a Houston-based financial counseling and education agency, said rising costs for gasoline and utilities were only part of the explanation for rising credit card delinquencies and increased consumer financial stress.
"People refinanced (their mortgages) six months or a year ago, so the 'house bank' is empty," Williams said. "Most can't go back and tap their home equity again."
In addition, she said, consumers can only juggle debt payments for a while. As she put it: "You let the car payment go one month, then the house payment. Then you make a lot of little creditors happy for one month, maybe for two months. Then it becomes obvious that you have to catch up on car payments, and everything else slides."
Williams called it "a dangerous strategy" because consumers who let accounts go delinquent risk harming their credit ratings. A poor credit rating makes it harder for consumers to get loans and can force them to pay higher rates on the loans they do get.
Consolidated Credit's Dvorkin pointed out that millions of Americans rushed to declare bankruptcy before the law change last fall made it harder for them to discharge unsecured debts. The high level of bankruptcy filings temporarily depressed the delinquency statistics and other measures of consumer financial distress, he said.
"Now we're seeing a new crop of people starting to get into trouble," he said. "They can't keep up. They're the ones most affected by increased gas prices and higher rates."
He said juggling payments is one of the "leading indicators" that a consumer is in trouble. He added that other telltale signs are:
-- You only make minimum payments month after month.
-- You're taking cash advances on one credit card to make the minimum payments on others.
-- You delay -- or are late, with important payments, such as the monthly mortgage.
-- You put off necessary activities, such as doctors' appointments.
Sure, I'll pack them in a big cardboard box so you can extend the living room.
Then Bigfoot really does exist!!
If you're only making $7.50 an hour, move. You'll be able to find a job for those wages just about anywhere, and I'd pick a place with a lower cost of living. Then I'd look to buy a small fixer-upper with a mortgage payment that'll run less than rent, and that'll provide some equity. It can be done:)
Now I have my super flame suit on for all the comments I will get saying I am a doom and gloom DU'er and Marxist thug.
Flame away.
ROTFL!
What flame? We just laugh at you poor souls in the soup lines!
Great news!
Well, I avoid dry-cleanables for enviro-weenie reasons :) But sheesh, this ain't rocket science. Has financial common sense gone out the window?
And DU isn't the gloom 'n doom site I was referring to. But you probably would have realized that had you not been so malnourished.
Apparently it's not the economy that's depressed! :-D
I thought you were being funny.
Yes for many financial common sense was never there.
Go in peace, my son.
It seems as though the leftist mainstream media is performing its job quite well, then, by influencing opinion in favor of democrats. They continually preach of the dying economy despite many indications otherwise. Many people, unfortunately, believe everything they read in the paper.
Even this article is full of BS. $80 dry-cleaning bills do not represent a credit problem - they represent a spending problem.
Which means you haven't a clue or facts about the area.
2) Your beautiful tale somehow provides supporting evidence of your garbage argument that most new jobs are minimum wage? ROTFL!
It's wonderful that you can laugh at others trying to survive. Must be fulfilling.
But the humor is lost on those poor souls unable to get their free doughnuts and coffee. That'll teach 'em to sleep in!
Irrelevant to your argument. Economic numbers presented to you, and to which you responded, were national. You have no response but empty rhetoric.
By the way, how many poor people have decks anyways?
It doesn't matter if you can't live on it.
So quit yer belly-achin'.
How sweet.
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