http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegrap...006009,00.html
Sydney's pay-later poor
By Linda Silmalis
October 14, 2006 12:00
DEBT-stricken families with new homes, cars and plasma televisions in Sydney's sprawling housing estates are relying on charity handouts to buy food.
Welfare agencies report a worrying increase in the number of middle-income families with big mortgages seeking help to pay grocery, electricity and gas bills.
Dubbed the "pay-later poor'' by St Vincent de Paul, they live in homes boasting cable television and the latest electrical goods and use credit cards to meet basic living costs.
Many of the families live in so-called McMansions.
Rising interest rates and petrol prices have hit them hard, with the latest figures showing soaring personal debt levels and bankruptcies.
With rates tipped to rise again next month, the blame game has begun, with the State Government accusing Federal Treasurer Peter Costello of economic mismanagement.
St Vincent de Paul Society chief executive officer John Picot said families were seeking cash and vouchers to buy food and clothing, and pay electricity and water bills and other debts.
He blamed a "want-it-all'' attitude for the trend.
Those who took up "buy now, pay later'' offers and store credit cards often found themselves in difficulty when the interest-free periods ran out, a member of the family fell ill or one of the family's breadwinners lost a job.
"I call them the pay-nothing-now poor - couples who have wanted everything now,'' he said.
"Retailers have created this new breed of poor - people who have over-extended themselves to buy a new home and then signed up to all these contracts to get the furniture, the television and cable.
"Suddenly there is a quarter per cent rise in interest rates and or a hike in petrol prices and of course, it's a disaster.
"We never heard of borrowing money from the bank to pay for wine or to get our hair done in the 1970s - that would have been an absolute nonsense - but that's what we are doing now through all these credit cards.
it goes on from there. no anti-spin required.
Sydney's pay-later poor
By Linda Silmalis
October 14, 2006 12:00
DEBT-stricken families with new homes, cars and plasma televisions in Sydney's sprawling housing estates are relying on charity handouts to buy food.
Welfare agencies report a worrying increase in the number of middle-income families with big mortgages seeking help to pay grocery, electricity and gas bills.
Dubbed the "pay-later poor'' by St Vincent de Paul, they live in homes boasting cable television and the latest electrical goods and use credit cards to meet basic living costs.
Many of the families live in so-called McMansions.
Rising interest rates and petrol prices have hit them hard, with the latest figures showing soaring personal debt levels and bankruptcies.
With rates tipped to rise again next month, the blame game has begun, with the State Government accusing Federal Treasurer Peter Costello of economic mismanagement.
St Vincent de Paul Society chief executive officer John Picot said families were seeking cash and vouchers to buy food and clothing, and pay electricity and water bills and other debts.
He blamed a "want-it-all'' attitude for the trend.
Those who took up "buy now, pay later'' offers and store credit cards often found themselves in difficulty when the interest-free periods ran out, a member of the family fell ill or one of the family's breadwinners lost a job.
"I call them the pay-nothing-now poor - couples who have wanted everything now,'' he said.
"Retailers have created this new breed of poor - people who have over-extended themselves to buy a new home and then signed up to all these contracts to get the furniture, the television and cable.
"Suddenly there is a quarter per cent rise in interest rates and or a hike in petrol prices and of course, it's a disaster.
"We never heard of borrowing money from the bank to pay for wine or to get our hair done in the 1970s - that would have been an absolute nonsense - but that's what we are doing now through all these credit cards.
it goes on from there. no anti-spin required.
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