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.

And, when people became accustomed to using credit cards, there was a subsequent rise in credit card debts as well and according to available credit card debt statistics, the average American had run up debts to the tune of approximately nine thousand dollars per year that were directly attributed to use of their credit cards.

Many consumers who found themselves deep in debt because of credit card use did so because of a misunderstanding of the process. They thought that the credit cards were connected to their own money that they already had.

This erroneous belief is not true in any way and is dangerous. The money used to make purchases on credit is that of the credit card company and it is your responsibility to return all money you borrow in accord with the terms you agreed to when your credit card was issued.

In addition to purchases made, interest also builds up in your credit card account, bringing debt to staggeringly high levels. The average interest rate on most credit cards is roughly fourteen percent, a rate that can quickly change a small credit card balance into overwhelming debt.

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