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Home arrow Credit Card Center arrow Past Due Credit Card Debt Hit Record High
Past Due Credit Card Debt Hit Record High
Energy costs, high food priceslow savings to blame.

 

WASHINGTON — Charge it! That familiar refrain is producing an unwanted response for more Americans: Your bill is overdue!

Credit Card Tips
Advice for people who fall behind on payments:

• Put away your credit cards for a while.

• Get a fix on the problem by going over credit and other financial statements to analyze where your money is going. Identify areas to trim or cut. If driving eats a big chunk of money, look for ways to consolidate trips or carpool. If more help is needed, consider seeking credit counseling.

• Build up savings, no matter how little or how slowly. “A lot of people think, I can’t save until I’m past this credit trap.

“Save even a small amount. Even if you have to keep raiding your savings to pay bills, you will eventually make progress and that can be very empowering,” said Susan Tiffany, director of consumer publishing at the Credit Union National Association.

• Do not let financial problems fester. Take steps as soon as possible to get the situation under control before it gets worse and you are buried under a mountain of debt and damage your credit rating.

• Pay attention to late fees and rate changes. Daniel Ray, editor-in-chief at Bankrate.com, on online financial service, said late fees are rising to an average of $35 per late payment from $29 a few years ago. Credit card companies can change the rate on your credit card with as little as 15 days notice — often in tiny print, he said. Credit card rates nationwide last week averaged 12.89% for fixed-rate cards and 13.31% for the more plentiful variable-rate cards.

– Associated Press


Surging energy prices, low personal savings and the higher cost of borrowing have combined to produce a record level of overdue credit card bills.

The American Bankers Association reported Wednesday that the percentage of credit card accounts 30 or more days past due climbed to an all-time high of 4.81% in the April-to-June period. It could grow in the months ahead, experts said.

The previous high of 4.76% came during the first three months of the year, in keeping with a generally steady rise in recent years.

“The last two quarters have not been pretty,” said Jim Chessen, the association’s chief economist.

Chessen and other analysts mostly blame high prices for gasoline and other energy products but say low savings and higher borrowing costs also play a role.

“The rise in gas prices is really stretching budgets to the breaking point for some people,” Chessen said. “Gas prices are taking huge chunks out of wallets, leaving some individuals with little left to meet their financial obligations.”

Pump prices were high before hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the Gulf Coast. After Katrina, prices jumped past $3 a gallon. Prices have moderated since but remain high.

The personal savings rate dipped to a record low of negative 0.6% in July. The negative percentage means that people did not have enough left over after paying their taxes to cover all of their spending in July. As a result, they dipped into savings to cover the shortfall.

When people have less money available to pay for energy costs or emergencies such as a big car repair, many resort to credit. That option is getting more expensive, too.

The Federal Reserve has been tightening credit since June 2004. That has caused commercial banks’ prime lending rate to rise to 6.75%, the highest in four years. These rates are used for many short-term consumer loans, including credit cards and popular home equity lines of credit.

About half of all credit problems stem from poor money management. Credit problems due to the loss of a job, sickness or divorce play less of a role, said personal finance expert Susan Tiffany, director of consumer publishing at the Credit Union National Association.

“That tells us people have some ability to do a better job. They are not completely helpless in the situation, and that’s good,” said Tiffany, whose trade group also is involved in efforts to improve people’s financial literacy.

Getting back on the road to financial health takes discipline and hard choices about what can be cut back or eliminated.

If credit card problems are plaguing a family, all the members should work together to come up with a plan and pare spending.

From an economic perspective, the current rise in delinquent credit card payments is not overly worrisome. But if the trend were to continue for a sustained period, it could spell trouble for the overall economy, said Lynn Reaser, chief economist at Bank of America’s Investment Strategies Group.

“It’s a flashing yellow light that we need to watch,” she said.

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