There are a couple of current threads here that prompt me to place some thoughts on credit cards and banking; stuff that has been bouncing around in my brain for a while
Bank Of America Credit Cards To Illegal Immigrants
http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=945 and
Are American's really the most stupid?
http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=938
I've tried to remember when in school I was exposed to I=prt. I think it might have been the 8th grade or in the 9th in algebra I. I've forgotten most formulas I learned in science classes, but for whatever reason I=prt has stuck with me.
I believe I was a junior in dental school age 23-24, when I learned that a department store in downtown Birmingham (didn't have malls then) would allow me to open a "charge account." I could buy stuff (basically clothing) and "charge it" and then pay something on the account each month and the "carrying charge" was 1.5%. I thought that was a great deal, and I remember buying a bunch (5 or 6) of Gant shirts, whether all at once or over time I don't recall. About nine months later, I went to a banker in my hometown and got a loan to buy my first car, a new 1966 Pontiac Tempest. Loan was about $3K and the rate was 6% as I recall. I am rather sure the thing that attracted me to the department store "charge account" was that in making the required monthly the payments were within my abilities as was making the car payment as I would be in the Navy within a few months drawing a steady paycheck. I am rather sure, my banker allowed me to defer my first car payment until I was on active duty.
Shortly after going on active duty in the summer 1966, I remember a classmate from dental school, who was stationed at the same place I was, coming up one day and showing me the "latest thing," a Bank Americard. He explained to me how it worked, and I believe I probably went by a Bank of America branch and got and filled out an application that day or soon after. Now I cannot recall the exact cause of my enthusiasm to obtain that card. Except for the charge account at the department store in Birmingham and my bank loan for my new car, everything I had ever bought until then had been either with cash or a good check.
It sticks in my mind that I never appreciated 1.5% interest per month equated to 18% per annum interest until someone else told me about that. I think that happened soon after I got my first Bank Americard. I write this to document my own ignorance and the temporary lapse in brain function pertinent to I=prt.
I have a sense that I never ran up more charges on my credit card than I could pay off on the next bill's presentation, but I am not positive about that. Several things I wish I had had back in 1966 (looking back from today) are a computer and a program like Quicken or Microsoft Money and the compulsion to have kept up with every cent that passed through my hands--it would truly be interesting to see now where my money went and exactly how I managed it. I can tell you based on memory, ICRS (I can't remember shit) about such from 40 years back.
At any rate, it struck me fairly early in my life that paying 18% more for something in order to have it immediately using a credit card was not worth the 18%. I don't know today if early on I charged things on my credit card and paid less than the balance for some month or not. I do know that I never had any balances that caused me distress, and I don't know when "balance transfers" came into vogue, but I know I never utilized that "feature" of credit cards.
Probably for 40 years I have been what I read somewhere recently the credit card industry calls a "freeloader." That term is apparently used in the credit card industry to denote those customers who pay off their balances each month. Generally I have never thought of myself as a "freeloader," but after thinking about this derogatory designation as it applies to myself I really must admit it is a correct, appropriate designation. I guess for many years I have been somewhat proud to be able to use the credit card companies' monies to pay for things I needed or wanted and to advantage myself with whatever small interest I made holding my money sometimes up to 50 days or so before turning it over to the credit card company. I think most times when I check out at a store and pay with a credit card, the thought crosses my mind that the credit card company is really not doing me a personal favor because it is collecting something from the merchant to process my transaction. I haven't always considered though that part of what I am paying for an item is due to the merchant choosing to accept credit cards.
But when I have stopped and and thought about the whole situation, the people who are truly supporting the entire credit card system are those who don't pay off their total bills when presented and due. Were it not for that segment of the population, I could not float what I may charge each month on my credit card. So in perhaps a deeper sense, I am a parasite, perhaps like a maggot, to some degree profitting a bit from that segment of the population who don't understand I=prt (and I was at least 25 years old with what would pass as 19 years of formal education before it dawned on me to what 1.5%/mo. equated). Of course, there are other rationalizations for why people don't pay off their balances each month, but I think I can guarantee one thing: if credit cards didn't exist, then the mountain of credit card debt would not either. (How is that for clarity in thinking?)
Richard Russell wrote something about a week or so ago regarding how bad it could be for the stock market and GDP if Americans really were to stop spending and begin savings. What he wrote struck me as sort of a dis-connect, paradox, contradiction (I cannot decide on the right word or think of the best word). On one hand people are pulling for the American economy to continue to bustle along, but on the other hand there is a lot of concern about people being so deeply in debt that it is going to lead or has already led to their ruination. If the market is to continue up the American spender cannot fade away. So do you want to see your investments grow at the expense of those who are spending themselves into ruination?
It is similar perhaps to the time of apartheid in South Africa. A lot of people in the world saw the immorality of segregation, but it took a long time for seriousness to develop about dis-investing themselves in South African companies. Similarly a person thinks cigarette smoking is bad for humans, yet invests in Altria; considers that health care expenses cannot continue as they are, but invests in HCA, Pfizer, Medtronic, etc.; thinks the financial industry is gaining more wealth as the expense of the ignorant, stupid, greedy population and investors, but invests in BAC, GS, C. All in all there is something crazy about all of this.
For a long time, probably decades, I have thought that 18% (and I know it can get higher) interest rates on credit card were usury, i.e. "an unconscionable or exorbitant rate or amount of interest." I guess I have been glad that I could "freeload" off the system and not have to pay 18% interest--a very self-centered perspective as I look upon it right now.
The problem as I see it is not fully the ignorance or stupidity of that portion of the credit-card-debtor-population that produces the big earnings in the credit card industry or of any company that extends its own credit, but the problem is that our elected officials have for as far back as I can recall, which would be 1966 at least, allowed companies to get away with charging such rates. 18% or 21% interest is not usury if the law allows it. Who has benefitted over the long run from this system that allows easy credit to everyone almost, including dogs, and looming on the horizon illegal aliens? Consumers, yes, probably to a large degree in achieving so-called instant gratification, but the large beneficiaries have been those who have been granted the legal ability to loan money at what truly are usurious rates. No one should interpret what I am attempting to put forth here as an attempt to remove people from accepting personal responsibilty for their actions.
Fortunately in retrospect, I grew up in a very middle-class home, where we did not get anything for which my father did not earn enough to pay for when we bought it. It was simple, we bought things we needed if we had the money. Was I deprived? No, I never felt that. Was I ever ashamed? No, I never felt that. Were we better off? I didn't realize it at the time, but definitely we were.
What is the answer now? My cynical answer is that there is but one real answer and that will only occur if the American economy for whatever the reasons implodes, and those who aren't moved to suicide are given the chance to start over with my hope that the next time around more things will be done better.
In the mean while, what can I do? I am not there yet, but for the last 7-10 days I have begun to contemplate how I can give up my credit cards and remove myself from the list of "freeloaders." It is a helluva lot easier to consider continuation of the freeloading than it is to consider doing without credit cards, but how mentally rewarding it is to do business with someone with whom you disagree about the manner in which they operate their business. It me is makes me a hypocrite, and I don't like that.
You know I believe we, at least me, have really been sucked into this whole scheme that supports the money lenders. I have some of the best, if not the best, insurance in America, USAA. A company with whom I have carried all my insurance except health, since I went into the Navy, and with whom I have never been short-changed in the few claims I have suffered. It has its own bank for some years now, and it stuck as peculiar me a couple of years back when USAA began allowing one to pay his premiums on a credit card, not just the bank's, but any bank's at no additional fee. Previously all my premiums were paid by debits in equal amounts over the period of the policy without any increase in the total premium, or reduction if you paid it at the beginning of a premium period. I switched to the credit card payment for the float and the air-miles, and I expect USAA Savings Bank has some who pay using its credit cards, but who don't pay off the balances each month. Last night I ordered a blood pressure cuff through Amazon using a credit card. I am not sure if I could have done the deal without a credit card--I didn't even look to see other means of payment. I pay my electricity bill using my credit card, no extra charge that I see. I pay my satellite bill with credit card. I got a "deal" from Charter Communication today in the mail for cable, Internet, and long-distance good for one year, but requiring a credit card. The credit card industry has thown out the net and landed millions of suckers--actually I do think that is a type of fish, a carp.
Does anyone reading this find survival easy without a credit card?
If yes, tell us how you do it. How bad is life without a credit card?
Personally I think I am going to give my card up, despite losing the accumulation of air-miles. I don't wish to be a freeloader or a sucker for the rest of my life.
Someone should call my hand in a couple of months and see if my word is any good.
Bank Of America Credit Cards To Illegal Immigrants
http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=945 and
Are American's really the most stupid?
http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=938
I've tried to remember when in school I was exposed to I=prt. I think it might have been the 8th grade or in the 9th in algebra I. I've forgotten most formulas I learned in science classes, but for whatever reason I=prt has stuck with me.
I believe I was a junior in dental school age 23-24, when I learned that a department store in downtown Birmingham (didn't have malls then) would allow me to open a "charge account." I could buy stuff (basically clothing) and "charge it" and then pay something on the account each month and the "carrying charge" was 1.5%. I thought that was a great deal, and I remember buying a bunch (5 or 6) of Gant shirts, whether all at once or over time I don't recall. About nine months later, I went to a banker in my hometown and got a loan to buy my first car, a new 1966 Pontiac Tempest. Loan was about $3K and the rate was 6% as I recall. I am rather sure the thing that attracted me to the department store "charge account" was that in making the required monthly the payments were within my abilities as was making the car payment as I would be in the Navy within a few months drawing a steady paycheck. I am rather sure, my banker allowed me to defer my first car payment until I was on active duty.
Shortly after going on active duty in the summer 1966, I remember a classmate from dental school, who was stationed at the same place I was, coming up one day and showing me the "latest thing," a Bank Americard. He explained to me how it worked, and I believe I probably went by a Bank of America branch and got and filled out an application that day or soon after. Now I cannot recall the exact cause of my enthusiasm to obtain that card. Except for the charge account at the department store in Birmingham and my bank loan for my new car, everything I had ever bought until then had been either with cash or a good check.
It sticks in my mind that I never appreciated 1.5% interest per month equated to 18% per annum interest until someone else told me about that. I think that happened soon after I got my first Bank Americard. I write this to document my own ignorance and the temporary lapse in brain function pertinent to I=prt.
I have a sense that I never ran up more charges on my credit card than I could pay off on the next bill's presentation, but I am not positive about that. Several things I wish I had had back in 1966 (looking back from today) are a computer and a program like Quicken or Microsoft Money and the compulsion to have kept up with every cent that passed through my hands--it would truly be interesting to see now where my money went and exactly how I managed it. I can tell you based on memory, ICRS (I can't remember shit) about such from 40 years back.
At any rate, it struck me fairly early in my life that paying 18% more for something in order to have it immediately using a credit card was not worth the 18%. I don't know today if early on I charged things on my credit card and paid less than the balance for some month or not. I do know that I never had any balances that caused me distress, and I don't know when "balance transfers" came into vogue, but I know I never utilized that "feature" of credit cards.
Probably for 40 years I have been what I read somewhere recently the credit card industry calls a "freeloader." That term is apparently used in the credit card industry to denote those customers who pay off their balances each month. Generally I have never thought of myself as a "freeloader," but after thinking about this derogatory designation as it applies to myself I really must admit it is a correct, appropriate designation. I guess for many years I have been somewhat proud to be able to use the credit card companies' monies to pay for things I needed or wanted and to advantage myself with whatever small interest I made holding my money sometimes up to 50 days or so before turning it over to the credit card company. I think most times when I check out at a store and pay with a credit card, the thought crosses my mind that the credit card company is really not doing me a personal favor because it is collecting something from the merchant to process my transaction. I haven't always considered though that part of what I am paying for an item is due to the merchant choosing to accept credit cards.
But when I have stopped and and thought about the whole situation, the people who are truly supporting the entire credit card system are those who don't pay off their total bills when presented and due. Were it not for that segment of the population, I could not float what I may charge each month on my credit card. So in perhaps a deeper sense, I am a parasite, perhaps like a maggot, to some degree profitting a bit from that segment of the population who don't understand I=prt (and I was at least 25 years old with what would pass as 19 years of formal education before it dawned on me to what 1.5%/mo. equated). Of course, there are other rationalizations for why people don't pay off their balances each month, but I think I can guarantee one thing: if credit cards didn't exist, then the mountain of credit card debt would not either. (How is that for clarity in thinking?)
Richard Russell wrote something about a week or so ago regarding how bad it could be for the stock market and GDP if Americans really were to stop spending and begin savings. What he wrote struck me as sort of a dis-connect, paradox, contradiction (I cannot decide on the right word or think of the best word). On one hand people are pulling for the American economy to continue to bustle along, but on the other hand there is a lot of concern about people being so deeply in debt that it is going to lead or has already led to their ruination. If the market is to continue up the American spender cannot fade away. So do you want to see your investments grow at the expense of those who are spending themselves into ruination?
It is similar perhaps to the time of apartheid in South Africa. A lot of people in the world saw the immorality of segregation, but it took a long time for seriousness to develop about dis-investing themselves in South African companies. Similarly a person thinks cigarette smoking is bad for humans, yet invests in Altria; considers that health care expenses cannot continue as they are, but invests in HCA, Pfizer, Medtronic, etc.; thinks the financial industry is gaining more wealth as the expense of the ignorant, stupid, greedy population and investors, but invests in BAC, GS, C. All in all there is something crazy about all of this.
For a long time, probably decades, I have thought that 18% (and I know it can get higher) interest rates on credit card were usury, i.e. "an unconscionable or exorbitant rate or amount of interest." I guess I have been glad that I could "freeload" off the system and not have to pay 18% interest--a very self-centered perspective as I look upon it right now.
The problem as I see it is not fully the ignorance or stupidity of that portion of the credit-card-debtor-population that produces the big earnings in the credit card industry or of any company that extends its own credit, but the problem is that our elected officials have for as far back as I can recall, which would be 1966 at least, allowed companies to get away with charging such rates. 18% or 21% interest is not usury if the law allows it. Who has benefitted over the long run from this system that allows easy credit to everyone almost, including dogs, and looming on the horizon illegal aliens? Consumers, yes, probably to a large degree in achieving so-called instant gratification, but the large beneficiaries have been those who have been granted the legal ability to loan money at what truly are usurious rates. No one should interpret what I am attempting to put forth here as an attempt to remove people from accepting personal responsibilty for their actions.
Fortunately in retrospect, I grew up in a very middle-class home, where we did not get anything for which my father did not earn enough to pay for when we bought it. It was simple, we bought things we needed if we had the money. Was I deprived? No, I never felt that. Was I ever ashamed? No, I never felt that. Were we better off? I didn't realize it at the time, but definitely we were.
What is the answer now? My cynical answer is that there is but one real answer and that will only occur if the American economy for whatever the reasons implodes, and those who aren't moved to suicide are given the chance to start over with my hope that the next time around more things will be done better.
In the mean while, what can I do? I am not there yet, but for the last 7-10 days I have begun to contemplate how I can give up my credit cards and remove myself from the list of "freeloaders." It is a helluva lot easier to consider continuation of the freeloading than it is to consider doing without credit cards, but how mentally rewarding it is to do business with someone with whom you disagree about the manner in which they operate their business. It me is makes me a hypocrite, and I don't like that.
You know I believe we, at least me, have really been sucked into this whole scheme that supports the money lenders. I have some of the best, if not the best, insurance in America, USAA. A company with whom I have carried all my insurance except health, since I went into the Navy, and with whom I have never been short-changed in the few claims I have suffered. It has its own bank for some years now, and it stuck as peculiar me a couple of years back when USAA began allowing one to pay his premiums on a credit card, not just the bank's, but any bank's at no additional fee. Previously all my premiums were paid by debits in equal amounts over the period of the policy without any increase in the total premium, or reduction if you paid it at the beginning of a premium period. I switched to the credit card payment for the float and the air-miles, and I expect USAA Savings Bank has some who pay using its credit cards, but who don't pay off the balances each month. Last night I ordered a blood pressure cuff through Amazon using a credit card. I am not sure if I could have done the deal without a credit card--I didn't even look to see other means of payment. I pay my electricity bill using my credit card, no extra charge that I see. I pay my satellite bill with credit card. I got a "deal" from Charter Communication today in the mail for cable, Internet, and long-distance good for one year, but requiring a credit card. The credit card industry has thown out the net and landed millions of suckers--actually I do think that is a type of fish, a carp.
Does anyone reading this find survival easy without a credit card?
If yes, tell us how you do it. How bad is life without a credit card?
Personally I think I am going to give my card up, despite losing the accumulation of air-miles. I don't wish to be a freeloader or a sucker for the rest of my life.
Someone should call my hand in a couple of months and see if my word is any good.
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