Consumer Debt More Than Doubles in Decade
NewsMax Wires
Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2004
NEW YORK -- As the bills from holiday spending sprees
arrive, Americans are finding that the mountain of debt they've
built has gotten even higher.
Consumer debt has more than doubled in the past 10 years to
record levels, making it hard for many families to cope.
For Bruce and Lorraine Esbensen of Clifton Heights, Pa., trouble
started when they spent lavishly on their wedding six years ago.
They soon found themselves falling behind on their bills.
"Creditors were calling, and I knew if I paid one, I couldn't
pay the other," Lorraine Esbensen remembers. "It was so painful I
got to the point where I didn't want to answer the phone."
Credit counselors helped the couple work out a repayment plan,
but it still took more than four years to pay down their debt.
"We still basically live paycheck to paycheck," she said.
"But we do have an IRA (Individual Retirement Account) going now,
and we're careful with our spending so we feel better."
Consumer debt hit a record $1.98 trillion in October 2003,
according to the most recent figures from the Federal Reserve. That
debt - which includes credit cards and car loans, but not mortgages
- translates to some $18,700 per U.S. household.
At the same time, the government says the nation's savings rate
dropped to just 2 percent of after-tax income in the first half of
the year. That means many people lack the means to deal with
financial emergencies, much less their eventual retirement.
Experts worry about the impact not only on individual families
but on society as a whole.
"The Depression generation is passing on, and we're losing
their values," said Howard Dvorkin, president of the nonprofit
Consolidated Credit Counseling Services in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
"Now we've got an entire generation that doesn't know anything
about thrift and careful spending. It's tearing the fabric that
made this country great."
Just how did American consumers get so deeply in debt?
Robert D. Manning, a sociology professor at the Rochester
Institute of Technology who wrote "Credit Card Nation _ The
Consequences of America's Addiction to Credit," says the problem
dates back to the 1980s, when financial institutions began issuing
credit cards and making loans to people who wouldn't have qualified
in the past.
"At the same time, people had this sense of entitlement based
on the idea that this generation was expected to outperform the
earlier generation," Manning said. "It was OK to buy yourself a
better standard of living than your parents, and the banks would
help you do it."
The nation's credit card debt currently stands at $735 billion,
or nearly $7,000 per household. And since about 40 percent of card
users pay their balances in full each month, the household card
debt of those who carry balances is closer to $12,000.
Americans have become champion shoppers, says Joel Greenberg,
chief executive officer of the nonprofit Novadebt credit counseling
service in Freehold, N.J.
"Through the go-go '90s, the irrational exuberance wasn't just
in the stock markets," Greenberg said. "It was throughout
society. We became phenomenal consumers - and deplorable savers."
Shopping is what Kristeen Mahler, a secretary from East Meadow,
N.Y., turned to for solace after the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks.
Mahler's office was just 100 yards from the World Trade Center.
"I shopped to try to forget it," she said.
She bought clothes for herself, gifts for friends - and kept the
mounting bills a secret even from her husband.
Mahler said she finally started talking about the attack and
found support from family and friends in dealing with her anxiety.
She also sought credit counseling and is one year into a four-year
plan to pay off her debts.
What's surprising about the nation's debt is that it has
continued to rise despite record numbers of mortgage refinancing
from 2001 to 2003, many of them yielding cash that consumers have
used to pay down credit card balances.
Mark Zandi, chief economist at Economy.com, points out that the
rate of growth of card debt has slowed "because people are using
their homes as cash machines."
But while refinancings have allowed upper income households to
put their balance sheets in order, lower income families without
that option are finding it harder to cope, he said.
"They're the folks filing for bankruptcy in record numbers,
they're the ones facing repossession and foreclosures," Zandi
said.
Consumer bankruptcies have exceeded 1 million a year since 1996,
hitting a record of 1.54 million in 2002. Bankruptcy filings
totaled 1.25 million during the first nine months of 2003 and could
set a new record when full-year tabulations are done by the
Washington-based American Bankruptcy Institute.
There's debate about how the high debt levels and demanding
repayment schedules will affect the economy.
Americans currently spend a near-record 18.1 percent of their
after-tax income to cover debts, including mortgages. That limits
their ability to borrow more to spend more, and consumer spending
accounts for about two-thirds of the economy.
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has pointed out that
because of low interest rates, consumers can more easily handle
their debt so the level is "not a significant cause for concern."
Economist Sung Won Sohn of Wells Fargo & Co. agrees that for
now, most Americans are OK and should continue to be the driving
force in the nation's economic growth.
Still, he said, the level of debt does raise concerns.
"In the long run, it's a ticking time bomb," Sohn said. "At
some point when you get a sharp setback in the economy or a spike
in interest rates, the high debt causes instability."
Editor's Note: Sir John Templeton warns of a housing bust - Click here!
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.