EXCESSIVE use of credit and credit cards has contributed to a leap in the number of personal bankruptcy cases. Figures from the Insolvency and Trustee Service of Australia show that there were 9,300 new bankruptcies, debt agreements orpersonal insolvency cases in Australia in the first quarter of 2009, an increase of 18.25 per cent on the same period from the previous year.
The main causes of personal insolvency were unemployment and excessive use of credit. The vast majority of bankruptcies were non-business-related personal bankruptcies. Credit cards should not be seen as the simple cause of bankruptcies because unemployment or ill-health could contribute to a greater reliance on credit and therefore various reasons for insolvency.
The report showed the occupations most likely to be affected by bankruptcy, debt agreements or personal insolvency were clerical workers, service workers, labourers, and mine workers. Marketing and availability of credit cards leads to people spending more than they can afford. People are sometimes offered more than 10 times the credit they ask for, and then they are encouraged to spend it, or they are sent a pre-approved credit limit increase.
April 14, 2010
We have been told for years that we are a Nation of over-consumers. Too much fatty food, too much binge drinking, too much energy/petrol/fossil fuels and too much credit?
Yes, that’s right, too much credit. It’s about time that we realised that our amount of credit card and other unsecured debt is just as damaging to our health as cigarettes and alcohol. The associated stress and worry of interest and repayments are taxing on the readily employed with a reasonable income, not to mention to effects our out-of-control spending has on those recently affected by the GFC. To those Australians who find themselves now unable to meet their credit commitments, this is very much the overconsumption of credit.
It’s all too easy to point the finger at the over-eager banks and lenders for wanting us to spend the money. We are, after all, asking for the money ourselves and then happily trotting off to spend it. We must take responsibility for our actions and our over-consumption.
The problem is… what if you can’t? Many ‘under-employed’ people have lost their well-paying jobs and now find themselves working in whatever capacity they can to keep a roof over their heads and food on the table. The reduced income however, does not stretch as far as pDebtaying all those loans and credit cards.
“There are other options out there’” Natalie Levett of Australian Financial Solutionsis quick to point out, “Most people just aren’t aware that there are alternatives which sit between ‘all OK’ and the last resort of bankruptcy”.
April 14, 2010