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Crunch time for credit card firms in move to tackle debt mountain

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Published Date: 03 July 2009
THE government has set out wide-ranging reforms for the credit card industry to try to cut the number of people struggling with unsustainable debts.
The proposed clampdown will mean a ban on unsolicited credit card cheques, while lenders will no longer be able to raise borrowers' credit limits without their consent, or raise interest rates on existing debts.

Ministers will also look at whethe
r minimum monthly repayments should be increased to help people repay debt quicker, and at the order in which debts on cards are repaid, to ensure the most expensive are paid off first.

The white paper also contains measures to strengthen people's rights, including appointing a Consumer Advocate to help those affected by scams get their cash back and lead group court actions on consumer issues.

Unsecured borrowing in the UK has soared in the past decade, with consumers collectively owing more than £230 billion on credit and store cards, overdrafts and loans.

But several practices employed by credit card providers are making it harder for people to pay down their debts.

These practices include setting monthly minimum repayments at a level that would generally take consumers about 25 years to clear their balance.

The majority of lenders also use repayments to pay down debts that incur the lowest interest rates first, meaning money on a 0 per cent balance transfer deal will be paid back before cash advances attracting interest of about 25 per cent a year.

Under the planned reforms, expected to come into effect next spring, credit card firms will also no longer be able to send out credit card cheques to borrowers unless they request them. The blank cheques can be used like personal cheques, with the value of the transaction added to the borrower's card balance. But the interest charged is typically far higher than for a purchase made using a card, often 28 per cent rather than about 17 per cent.

Borrowers using the cheques also incur handling fees of 2 per cent of the value of the transaction, while there is no interest-free period and consumers do not get the same level of protection on purchases as they would if they had used their card.

Andrew Hagger, of Moneynet. co.uk, said: "Credit card cheques have wreaked havoc with the finances of unsuspecting credit card customers for years."

There will also be new requirements for all lenders to check consumers' credit worthiness before they advance money to them and to explain financial products fully, as well as curbs on excessive fees and charges.

Meanwhile, the Office of Fair Trading said it would carry out a review of the £35bn-a-year, high-cost credit market, under which small sums of money are lent over a short period to people who would have trouble getting credit elsewhere, often at interest rates of 50 per cent APR.

The Finance & Leasing Association warned that, overall, some of the proposed changes could see consumers facing reduced credit availability and higher prices.





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  • Last Updated: 02 July 2009 6:09 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Consumer debt
 
1

Mad Jock,

Offshore Denmark 03/07/2009 06:52:29
Much as I despise the credit card companies, I equally have very little sympathy for the users who allowed themselves to get into so much debt in the first place.
If you can't afford it, you can't have it. Live by that and you should never have financial difficulties.
Educate children to use money wisely, and bring back means testing for credit cards.
This new raft of "measures" is merely protecting the stupid from themselves. Britain truly is being dumbed down. Don't let them have a credit card in the first place. The lack of regulation in this area is why we are in the financial crisis that we find ourselves, as a nation, today.
When I got my first, and only, credit card in 1984, I had to prove that I had funds to pay for it. I pay it off by direct debit.
A few suggestions:
Limit the number of cards that any one person can own.
Credit limit increases must be requested, not offered.
Proof of ability to pay made mandatory.
Unsolicited cards banned.
When the credit ,limit is reached, the card is destroyed. No new cards can be issued to the user, by anyone, until the debt is paid.
2

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 03/07/2009 09:44:41
About time that these measures were introduced

 

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