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Financial Reform: Can It End Americans' Addiction To Credit?

By RACHEL BECK   07/23/10 01:37 PM ET   AP

Financial Reform Credit

NEW YORK -- The battle over financial regulation is finally over. Now comes the harder part: kicking Americans' love of credit.

The financial crisis didn't happen just because banks, credit-card companies and mortgage lenders forced consumers to take on massive debt. We willingly gobbled up the easy credit they offered and used it to buy cars and houses, take vacations and go shopping.

Then came the blowup. All that debt, matched with one in 10 Americans unemployed and plunging home prices, strangled our finances and ultimately, the overall economy.

New regulations, which President Barack Obama signed into law on Wednesday, can only go so far to prevent future financial crises like the one we are living through. Banks will still lend. And many of us will borrow too much.

"You can't legislate diligence," says Robert Lawless, an expert on consumer credit at the University of Illinois College of Law and a contributor to the blog Credit Slips. "You can't pass laws that make people be careful when they take out loans."

There are already signs that lenders are eager to lure us back. Credit-card solicitations jumped 45 percent during the first half of this year to 884 million, according to estimates from research firm Synovate.

And all that talk about limiting lending to consumers with risky credit profiles seems to be fading. Issuers mailed nearly 85 million credit-card offers to subprime borrowers during the first six months of 2010, double year-ago levels, Synovate estimates.

That kind of growth has to do with one thing: The card issuers know they can make more money off of riskier borrowers because they can charge higher interest rates and annual fees, says Synovate's Anuj Shahani.

More evidence of credit expansion came Thursday when General Motors said it would buy subprime lender AmeriCredit Corp. for $3.5 billion in a deal that will let the automaker increase lending to customers with poor credit.

GM executives say they miss sales opportunities due to lack of credit for lease deals and financing for buyers with low credit scores.

"Clearly there's an opportunity to bring more people into our showrooms and help them with finance," GM chief financial officer Chris Liddell said after the deal was announced.

Let's be clear: not all borrowing is bad. Taking out a loan to buy a car is the kind of purchase that requires us to borrow. Having access to credit also keeps the economy going, since we can't pay for everything with cash.

However, we still need to be careful. Amazingly, the pace of consumer borrowing hasn't fallen off that much, even in the wake of the recession and financial crisis. Mortgage lending has dropped, but borrowing on credit cards and other loans, such as for autos, is only slightly below historical levels.

Federal Reserve data shows consumer borrowing ran at an annual rate of $2.42 trillion in May. That was the 15th decline in 16 months, but the amount is still on par with the winter of 2007, when credit was still booming.

The new rules might get rid of the riskiest loans in the marketplace. Regulators will be able to ban financial products they think are unsafe or outlaw things that might be confusing, like the fine print on credit card or mortgage applications. Mortgage lenders will also be required to verify a borrower's income, credit history and employment status.

Those are good first steps, but they'll be meaningless if Americans continue to ignore the basics rules of avoiding credit disasters.

We have to understand the kinds of loans were are getting, and whether we can afford them. An adjustable-rate mortgage isn't a bad thing on its own, but it can be if you don't realize your rate could go from 2 percent to 10 percent five years from now.

We don't need a wallet full of credit cards. We have to save more. We have to read the disclosures on every loan we get.

"You can't force people into long-term financial stability," says Todd Mark, vice president of education at the Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Greater Dallas. "Plenty of people still don't understand the dangers of debt."

Mark and other credit counselors worry what happens next, when the economy improves and credit flows more freely. If the unemployment rate finally retreats, the bingeing could come back, maybe even more than before.

"When credit is easy, it can be rational to over-borrow," says Lawless of the University of Illinois.

Unless Americans radically change their approach to credit, we know where this story goes in five or 10 years. It will look a lot like the mess we're in today.

___

Rachel Beck is the national business columnist for The Associated Press. Write to her at rbeck(at)ap.org

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NEW YORK -- The battle over financial regulation is finally over. Now comes the harder part: kicking Americans' love of credit. The financial crisis didn't happen just because banks, credit-card co...
NEW YORK -- The battle over financial regulation is finally over. Now comes the harder part: kicking Americans' love of credit. The financial crisis didn't happen just because banks, credit-card co...
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11:21 PM on 07/27/2010
Best thing to do is boycott the banks live off of cash and save for your big purchases, get rid of the credit cards and live with in your means, my wife and I have. It took some adjustment but It's better for your health stress and teaches your children financial resposibilty. How much crap do we really need to live a good life, when is enough, enough!!!
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Haditup2here
8 Years of Insanity and now you're mad?
09:15 AM on 07/27/2010
And what of the FICO scores?
01:38 PM on 07/27/2010
Agreed - we need to come up with a new system. FICO scores are garbage anyway. I have a GOOD score and I believe this!!
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Haditup2here
8 Years of Insanity and now you're mad?
03:42 PM on 07/27/2010
What I find most stu.pid is the fact that it is partially based on on the average time that you have carried the credit cards under your name. So in other words, if a Bank or Credit Card company increases your APR (of a card you have had for 10 or more years) with no fault of your own (and only to recoup their losses from other customers), you are supposed to stick with them unless you want your FICO score to go down. If it is about someone's ability and history of paying their credit versus their risk, then it should just be about that.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrcontinental
03:21 AM on 07/27/2010
Yes the love affair with credit needs to end. Of course then people will realize that their current wages do not actually enable them to afford much of anything. Maybe once they start counting every single penny while witnessing their current standard of living deteriorate to a shadow of what it once was, perhaps then they will start paying attention to what both parties are doing to us.
01:56 PM on 07/27/2010
Well said.
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Haditup2here
8 Years of Insanity and now you're mad?
03:42 PM on 07/27/2010
Very true.
05:28 PM on 07/26/2010
I kept getting one from an outfit in Sioux City, South Dakota. Like flotsam in a cesspool they seem to coagulate in Sioux City. Anyway can't say what I wrote on application, but on reply envelope wrote "Return to these Crooks, Bloodsuckers, etc, etc........... Never got another one. If I do I intend to use it as a doggie do scooper and then return it.
01:39 PM on 07/27/2010
SD has the lowest regulation. Surprise surprise.
05:23 PM on 07/26/2010
Sure, get some more credit cards. Here we go again. The Reform that wasn't.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Myoho
07:00 PM on 07/25/2010
As soon as Bush was selected in 2000, I just knew he, his cronies and the Repubs would destroy this country. The very next day after the election I swore I would pay off all my Credit Cards and never use them again. It took me 3 years to pay them all off and I am debt free. I now have my Debit card and one secured Credit card. Also moved my money out of BofA in to a local Credit Union back in 2002 and have never looked back! If I want something, I now save for it. Never again will I provide my business to these companies knowingly.
12:21 PM on 07/26/2010
Good story. Just like America needs to be moved from oil dependancy, we also need to be savvy on credit dependancy.

I too, moved from a bank to a credit union over a year ago and have not looked back. And I sleep better at night.
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DiogenesOfAlaska
Mitt Romney for president - of the Cayman islands!
06:38 PM on 07/25/2010
Cold turkey has got me on the run. Thirty six months rolling in pain.
03:31 PM on 07/25/2010
Interesting.

When posters see an opportunity to blame someone else for the recent economic woes, there are thousands of comments. When posters see they are squarely in the blame mix, there are only 71 comments.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
beckpod1
10:02 AM on 07/25/2010
Only a decent education will help our people become financially responsible...I don't see that happening....
01:17 AM on 07/25/2010
gee, what a surprise government motors is trying to hurt consumers with high interest rate
03:33 PM on 07/25/2010
Let's get one thing clear. The consumer signs on the bottom line, not the government, not the auto lenders. Caveat emptor.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hrpmap
Retired man still active..
12:35 AM on 07/25/2010
Sorry about that, it's in the HCB not the so-called reform bill. Something is about to end, but I am not sure what.

http://riffenberg.wordpress.com/2010/07/18/required-tracking-of-gold-silver-purchases-in-health-care-bill/
http://directorblue.blogspot.com/2010/07/health-care-bill-inserts-tracking-of.html
MGhamma
Reality is 100% biased!
10:39 PM on 07/24/2010
Capitalist "free" market economies are unsustainable long term. They need to grow to survive.

In order to grow, they need ever expanding populations of people to maintain demand for the products produced.

For human populations to grow, we need room, and abundent resources to tap into.

In case no ones noticed, we're running out of both room, and resources.

Like it or not, human society is going to have to move away from capitalism, to some form of socialism.

Or else we'll destroy this planets ability to sustain life.

Then all our problems will be splved.
03:42 PM on 07/25/2010
Good post, MGhamma, and not so good.

Measurement of economic well being as continuous growth in GDP is not sustainable. As you say, it requires continuous population growth and increasing resources. Overpopulation has destroyed the world, the environment and economies; diminishing finite resources cannot sustain the masses.

Socialism does not work. There is ample proof of that. The answer is capitalism with a new measurement for economic well-being and strict population control. May already be too late. Many experts think so, with wild life already doomed and human beings headed for a massive decrease (billions) by 2050, if they are to survive.
08:55 PM on 07/24/2010
Isn't it a coinkydink that when wages starting falling or stagnating, that credit became easy. Then after that our house prices started going up again becasue credit was easy and we could borrow on our houses. We kept going further into the hole becasue now borrowing made more sense than saving. Now that the economy has stalled let's ...you guessed it ....borrow some more. And right or left does not matter. Bush started it, Obama continues it. Now we're all unemployed and the country is so far in debt that the only thing will save us....more borrowing. Growth, growth, growth, even if it's fake and borrowed. Growth, growth, growth.
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KOSMOCITIZEN
time is truth
07:20 PM on 07/24/2010
when banks implemented their plan to give us easy credit (Reagan's years)their objective
was a simple one .
we never going to have enough to save anything, that way the underground economy is under check .
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06:45 PM on 07/24/2010
I depend on credit for notta thing. If only lay-away would come back, I could get more things, but the crap they are making now, I don't want. I am at the replacement stage of my life now, and the things I am replacing were 200% better than this 'disposable' mess they have now. You can't even find a repairman for your old stuff, because they stopped making replacement parts, (while out-sourcing our jobs)...