Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

    Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class – The Withdrawal is in And the Wall Street Dealers are Raking in Trillions of Dollars. 2 Credit Cards for Every Man, Woman, and Child in the U.S.

    If you want to know how reliant the middle class has become on credit cards all you need to know is that in circulation we have 631 million credit cards in the U.S. For a nation with slightly above 300 million people this is roughly 2 credit cards for each man, woman, and child. Credit cards and their subsequent “plastic free” variety of home equity lines of credit caused a massive boom that really put a veil over the underlying destruction of the middle class. As Americans spent their way inching closer to the day of paying the Pied Piper, many thought they were getting wealthier when in reality, they were merely leasing a smoke and mirrors operation of transferring all their wealth to the banking sector of the economy. It would be one thing if banks were lending their own money and putting their operations at risk. When push came to shove, Americans get booted from their homes and have cars reposed while banks steal taxpayer bailout money to enrich themselves even further. In addition, big operations funded by big money are now going out there buying properties at fire sale prices with government backed money.

    The credit card as we have it in the U.S. is really a unique phenomenon:


    Source: Creditcards.com

    Only a handful of banks dominate the credit card industry. The credit card is really built on the premise that the gravy train can go on forever. At the apex of the credit bubble, and let us face it housing wasn’t the only thing being financed with easy money, credit card companies were offering zero percent offers to lure customers into debt servitude. Now that banks use the pretext that the “world has changed”, they can up those fees and interest rates and many Americans due to the weak economy are now no longer able to meet their obligations. Credit card default rates are soaring:


    Source: Calculated Risk

    Those that can’t pay by definition will not pay and that is why we are seeing high levels of bankruptcy. A credit card was never intended to be used as a secondary source of income but that is what it has become since wages have been stagnant for over a decade. The vast majority do not pay their balance off each month. This is same misguided premise on which option ARM loans were based on. Given the option 90+ percent of the people went with the minimum payment causing an endgame that we are now dealing with. Credit card loans outstanding have been contracting at a feverish pitch:



    Yet wasn’t the premise of the banking bailouts to increase credit in the market? Of course the banking system has largely captured the current lawmakers and the policy we are getting is friendly to their needs and desires while using the American taxpayer as their own form of credit card. The lie that was perpetuated was that debt equals wealth and it absolutely does not. So people in modest neighborhoods saw friends and family driving foreign cars and wondered how they were doing it with a $40,000 a year income. They were doing it by extending themselves to the point of financial disaster. So as the disaster hits, we operate in parallel universes. The public that did over extend has to realize the marketplace reaction of cutting back, losing homes, or bankruptcy. Banks on the other hand have actually come out ahead receiving trillions in dollars of taxpayer funded money. Nothing easier than getting money in a hype of fear with politicians friendly to your cause.

    Much of the easy lending environment was given the blessing by the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury:



    The above is really the story of the housing bubble, credit bubble, and easy money world we had for over a decade. That is now completely changed and I often wonder if people realize that we won’t be going back to how things were. We can’t. The underlying issue is the amount of debt being serviced now. GDP includes this as a “positive” but we are now transferring this additional wealth to the banking sector on merely servicing preexisting debt. This is like being happy that banks made billions of dollars in overdraft fees. How is this good for the economy or most Americans? The math is so distorted that many Americans are wondering how in a country where 20 percent are underemployed we can have a 73 percent stock market rally.
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .

  • #2
    Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

    The math is so distorted that many Americans are wondering how in a country where 20 percent are underemployed we can have a 73 percent stock market rally.
    I've been wondering this myself.

    You can't listen to a call in consumer radio show without hearing a dozen stories of unemployed people putting daily expenses on plastic, hoping to get by until they find a job.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

      unfortunately the plan is IMO:

      get people to spend and this will result in a self-sustaining recovery ...

      b/c unemployment is high and incomes stagnant, insure people have access to credit (credit cards), so they can support themselves and keep spending

      HOPE that the economy will turn before larger number of folks run out of credit AND

      HOPE that the majority of folks continue to play by the roles and won't default on their debt AND

      Have a $250 billion bailout fund for tapping to make the banks whole as debtors default (and don't publicly announce the credit card bailout until well after the bulk of defaults have occurred, and make it retroactive through a certain date to prevent those who are heavily in debt and trying to pay, not be able to default and take advantage of the program)

      The stock market rally is a joke and will continue until the fed raises rates, period.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

        I love my credit cards. I have one of each brand. We put everything we can on them each month and pay them off on time every time. In the meantime, I collect the rewards, have purchase and trip insurance, increase my credit rating for when I finally buy a house, don't have to carry lots of cash, and enjoy the float. What's not to love? All it takes is a bit of discipline. If I could, I would bathe in them and my bullion. On the downside, their use doesn't tow the "screw the establishment" line, but as much as I hate the corruption in banking and in the overall economy, I still would rather have structure than chaos, and don't think credit in and of itself is evil; not that anyone has necessarily implied that.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

          Originally posted by Jay View Post
          I love my credit cards. I have one of each brand. We put everything we can on them each month and pay them off on time every time. In the meantime, I collect the rewards, have purchase and trip insurance, increase my credit rating for when I finally buy a house, don't have to carry lots of cash, and enjoy the float. What's not to love? All it takes is a bit of discipline. If I could, I would bathe in them and my bullion. On the downside, their use doesn't tow the "screw the establishment" line, but as much as I hate the corruption in banking and in the overall economy, I still would rather have structure than chaos, and don't think credit in and of itself is evil; not that anyone has necessarily implied that.
          +1 and ditto for mortgages. No one forced me to agree to outrageous terms in any of mortgages or re-fis. I've gotten several "free" flights to Argentina (where my wife is from) over the past several years from mt AA/Citi card.
          Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

            I hope that you realize that the way consumer credit (CCs) currently works, credit card companies make no money from people who can afford them, and use them in a "responsible" manner. They make money from people who are poor credit risks, and ones who should not be having a credit card (and who should not be given one!)

            What if credit cards were straightforward loans with no grace periods, and no inducements to spend (but a much lower interest rate) -- would the credit card companies make the same profits? I somehow doubt it!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

              How dare those evil nasty banks force innocent people to borrow money they couldn't pay back.

              I remember those horrible days well. They would drag you out of bed at 4am and force you to sign up for credit cards. Then they would load you on a bus and take you over to the mall to max them out on CDs and costume jewelry. Then there was that van they drove residential areas and men would get out and force you to take piles of cash at gunpoint. Then hold you down and force you to sign your new home equity loan. It was even worse than that obesity epidemic in '06. There was food everywhere, and people just kept eating and getting fatter. They had no choice, it was a catastrophe!

              I blame the government for not being there to prevent all that. They better get busy, and pass some more laws soon before someone implies that I might be responsible for my own actions.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

                You might want to look at the following thread in its entirity

                Frontline - Secret History of the Credit Card (2004)

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

                  Humorous take on credit cards

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

                    Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
                    I hope that you realize that the way consumer credit (CCs) currently works, credit card companies make no money from people who can afford them, and use them in a "responsible" manner. They make money from people who are poor credit risks, and ones who should not be having a credit card (and who should not be given one!)
                    Credit Card companies make money off of every transaction at time of purchase. I have a merchant account for my e-commerce store, and have to pay about 3-4% of every sale to MasterCard, Visa, Discover and AmEx.

                    Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

                      Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
                      I hope that you realize that the way consumer credit (CCs) currently works, credit card companies make no money from people who can afford them, and use them in a "responsible" manner. They make money from people who are poor credit risks, and ones who should not be having a credit card (and who should not be given one!)

                      What if credit cards were straightforward loans with no grace periods, and no inducements to spend (but a much lower interest rate) -- would the credit card companies make the same profits? I somehow doubt it!
                      Last I checked, the credit card companies get a larger percent of my purchase than they return to me as a reward, and it is likely that the true overhead for its use isn't large in the scope of things for them. They make money on me.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

                        From Credit Card Facts and Stats

                        Credit card companies collected $115 billion in revenue in 2006, about two-thirds from interest payments, one-fifth from fees paid by merchant

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

                          Also from ABC News - Tricks, Not Treats -- Pew Study Finds 'Deceptive' Credit Card Practices Rising

                          Despite Reform, Credit Card Companies Engage in More Unfair Practices, Study Finds

                          By RICH BLAKE
                          Oct. 28, 2009 —

                          Alison Howard, a single mom from Atlanta, sent her only son Bryan off to college last year for what she hoped would be a lifelong education. One lasting lesson is now burned into his brain: Beware of banks bearing special credit card offers.

                          The University of Albany, Ga., student, failing to fully familiarize himself with all the many lines of fine print in the terms of the arrangement, unwittingly racked up hundreds of dollars in penalty fees in just a few months.

                          In an effort to protect consumers like Bryan Howard from what the Federal Reserve called "unfair or deceptive" practices by banks issuing credit cards, Congress earlier this year passed the Credit CARD Act of 2009.

                          But such unfair or deceptive practices haven't abated in the lag time between when the law was passed and when it goes into full effect in February -- they are actually on the rise, according to a report released today by the Pew Charitable Trusts

                          A full 100 percent of the credit cards offered online by the 12 leading bank card issuers continue to include practices that will be soon be outlawed, once the legislation passed in May takes effect next year, according to a new report by the Pew Health Group's Safe Credit Cards Project.
                          .
                          .
                          .
                          .
                          .
                          .

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

                            Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
                            You might want to look at the following thread in its entirity

                            Frontline - Secret History of the Credit Card (2004)

                            It takes two to tango. Banks can't force people to borrow. The boom in expensive revolving credit is due to demand not bank pressure. Sure it is profitable; if it wasn't, there would be nobody to provide the service.

                            And what ever happened to saving up to buy something? Do I have to wax nostalgic about people living within their means as if it were some distant relic of the forgotten past where the very rumor of a second mortgages was bound to produce whispers.

                            What about the people enjoying tangible goods and services while sticking the banks with some electronic zeros. It makes me ask who cheated who? But we aren't interested in that, and so we criticize the banks while ignoring the greediness of their customers.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Credit Cards the Opiate of the American Middle Class

                              Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
                              I hope that you realize that the way consumer credit (CCs) currently works, credit card companies make no money from people who can afford them, and use them in a "responsible" manner. They make money from people who are poor credit risks, and ones who should not be having a credit card (and who should not be given one!)

                              What if credit cards were straightforward loans with no grace periods, and no inducements to spend (but a much lower interest rate) -- would the credit card companies make the same profits? I somehow doubt it!
                              "Should" not have one? Who decides that? The Annointed?

                              I have no problem with them making money from less responsible users.
                              Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X