Has your minimum credit card payments suddenly doubled? Read
this article by Paul Richard, RFC (Registered Financial Consultant) Executive
Director Institute of Consumer Financial Education (ICFE).
ICFE eNEWS - January 4th 2006 Minimum Credit Card Payments
Double A $10,000 balance can now be paid off in 15 years instead
of 58! San Diego CA - Who can imagine paying on the same credit card debt for
58 years? Not me. That is how long a debtor would be paying on a credit card
balance of $10,000, at 18 percent interest, if they were only to make the
minimum payment of just two percent of the outstanding balance, which was the
old minimum payment schedule for way too many years.
The nearly 58 years to pay this off, assuming that person stuck to
the minimum payment each month, (according to Bankrate.com's credit card
calculator, at BankRate.com). The total interest paid during that time would be
about $28,931. Now, the same person paying 4% of outstanding balance each month
would pay off the debt in a more reasonable 15 years and would pay much less in
interest: $5,916.
Minimum payments on credit cards have increased, some two years
after the January 2003 guidelines issued by the Federal Reserve, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp., the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the
Office of Thrift Supervision. Card issuers are supposed to adopt higher
minimums by the end of 2005. Still, "with a few exceptions, we expect the
issuers to be in compliance by year's end," says Barbara Grunkemeyer of the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, one of the agencies that issued the
guidelines. Regulators didn't require minimum payments to rise by a fixed
amount. The guidelines said payments should cover fees and finance charges,
plus 1% of principal.
Until now, some minimums didn't even cover the interest
owed, so debt would just keep growing. The federal agencies said they
were acting after years of seeing credit card issuers lower minimum payments
because of "competitive pressures and a desire to preserve outstanding
balances." The agencies also expressed alarm that some banks were setting
minimum credit card payments at levels that didn't even cover interest. The
result: The debt loads for some consumers surged.
Some card holders could see their minimum payment
double, to 4% of the balance from 2%. On a $10,000 balance, the
payment could jump to $400 from $200. The changes affect the millions of credit
card holders who do not pay their balances in full each month. A survey
conducted by the American Bankers Association earlier in 2005 indicated that 43
percent of consumers carry balances each month. As energy prices soar, these
unfortunate consumers will now have to pay double on their charge accounts.
When credit and charge cards first began to appear in the 1950s,
the minimum payment was ten percent of the outstanding balance. Back then,
cardholders had little difficulty paying off their credit card balances. What
happened? Over the years, as the availability and use of credit increased
dramatically, banks and other credit card issuers, quietly began to lower their
minimum payments for the credit cards they issued. This lowering of the minimum
payments over the years kept cardholders in debt longer and caused them to pay
more interest and also some new fees.
The big explosion in credit cards came in the 1990s when AT&T
and General Motors, among numerous others, decided to get into the credit card
business. Consumers were assaulted with numerous promotions and advertising all
aimed at getting people, young and old alike, to acquire either their first or
yet another charge card. It was not uncommon to have friends who carried as
many as eight or ten different credit cards.
In the early part of 2003, the ICFE discovered and was the
first to report on the so called Universal Default clauses
which began to appear in new credit card offerings. Universal default
simply means if a debtor is late making a payment to another creditor and it
appears on the debtor's credit report, other card issuers and creditors who
have included universal default into their credit card and other loan
agreements, could also declare this particular debtor in default and access
higher fees, raise the annual percentage rate to the higher rates, usually
29.99%.
As part of the universal default declaration, creditors may
lower the credit limits and should the debtor be over the newer, lower credit
limit, they will begin to receive over-limit notices and fees. This practice
also occurs when a debtor makes a purchase, which may take them over their
limit, the issuer approves the purchase and it results in the debtor being over
their credit limit, and so therefore, it creates another over-limit notice and,
of course, another fee.
The Comptroller of the Currency has not ruled that Universal
Default is illegal, however they did warn banks and other credit card issuers
under its regulatory powers who incorporate universal default into their credit
card offers and agreements to properly notify consumers in writing and with a
larger type size on the offers and agreements when discussing default and
universal default. In the short run, higher minimum credit card payments will
put the squeeze on many households, no doubt causing more than a few to go into
default status.
The American Bankruptcy Institute expects more filings from
low-income consumers who can't handle higher credit card payments. Yet it may
not be feasible for some to declare bankruptcy because of the stricter
bankruptcy rules that have taken effect. In the long run, however, it should
enable more consumers who do carry credit card balances to pay them off quicker
and therefore pay less interest and other fees.
Article is courtesy of:
Paul Richard, RFC (Registered
Financial Consultant) Executive Director Institute of Consumer Financial Education
(ICFE) PO Box 34070 San Diego, CA 92163-4070
About the ICFE: The Institute of Consumer
Financial Education (ICFE), founded in 1982 by the late Loren Dunton (creator
of the "certified financial planner" (CFP) designation) and it is dedicated to
helping consumers of all ages to improve their spending, increase savings and
use credit more wisely. The ICFE is an award winning, non-profit consumer
education organization that has helped millions of people through its education
programs and resources.
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