andrewducker: (sleeping doggy)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2005-10-23 11:45 pm

They should be taken out and shot

I just opened some junk mail that had arrived here for [livejournal.com profile] tisme - offering credit - "No matter your credit history", at the low, low rate of 29.9% - but with the first week only costing £1!

Oh, and you had to buy from their store, where they were selling wide-screen TVs, over-priced computers and "authentic" leather beds.

So, they're aiming it at people with no money, a history of bad debt, a taste for stupidly expensive things, and no idea that 30% interest rates are a mindnumbingly horrible rip-off

They should all be fucking shot repeatedly through the head.

[identity profile] bohemiancoast.livejournal.com 2005-10-25 08:18 am (UTC)(link)
The Government already does a bit of that through the Social Fund. But of course, the amount people can borrow is limited. When people have exhausted all lines of borrowing, they will still want to borrow money. You might well argue that they shouldn't; but you won't stop it happening.

Your suggestion that the state should step in as a debt-counsellor is common; it's pretty damned expensive as you can probably imagine. We used to do it, and I'm not sure we ever did much good. And it does nothing to discourage informal borrowing.

The main approach instead is credit unions; much better in principle than the government for this sort of thing, because they're local and community based. But they have some of the same sorts of limitations as the Social Fund; eventually, if people manage their money badly enough, they will reach the end of what the credit union is prepared to offer.

I don't see anything in your argument that comes remotely close to an explanation of why you think 30% is an excessive charge, particularly on people who have repeatedly defaulted. Remember that the process isn't risk free; the courts will almost never order poor people to repay unsecured loans at any serious rate, so that '30% APR' is primarily a risk charge and cost-of-colleciton charge, rather than the cost-of-capital charge.

In practice, the real problem with APR as a measure it's that it's not how people think; they think 'oh, I borrow £100 from Bill, and pay him back £5 per week for 6 months; that's ok, I can manage that', rather than 'That's 96% APR! That's far too high!' APR works quite well as a tool for middle-class people to calculate the cost of large loans; it's not at all good as a way for poor people to manage small loans.

[identity profile] bohemiancoast.livejournal.com 2005-10-25 09:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, now we agree. Yes, we live in a world where we convince ourselves that we'll be happier if only we have a better telly.

Of course, I *was* happier when I got a computer with a big wide screen. But that's *me*, and I'm not in debt*.

*Apart from the mortgage. We don't talk about the mortgage.