Entry tags:
Expensive credit
“was lent”? No element of “chose to borrow” at all?
Yes, offering to loan someone more money than they can sensibly afford (assuming that's what we're meant to conclude from the above numbers) is an irresponsible act. But so is accepting the offer. There's two parties to this decision and I don't see why all the blame is being attached to only one of them.
(My credit limit, on the same kind of card, started out at £4,500 and in fact hasn't changed since then; five or six years, I think. So it's clearly possible to have a credit card from the same bank without a ridiculously inflating limit.)
no subject
no subject
not sure that all the blame is being attached to one party
no subject
(Anonymous) 2006-06-04 05:38 pm (UTC)(link)This is a particularly sensationalist non-article for the BBC. Where's the news content - that banks have an obligation to generate profits for their shareholders?
(I think the raising of credit limits depends on the card. My barclaycard and lloyds limits have only risen at my request where as my virgin card was raised by 10% or so.)
no subject
no subject
no subject
I think part of the point is that it's very easy for a bank to stick to the guidelines that suggest they shouldn't offer credit in implausibly inappropriate situations, and quite difficult for people under pressure to apply the necessary sanity checking.
But most importantly - my understanding is that when you look at the detail of these cases, the ever raising credit limit is almost invariably made not so people can make more purchases, but so that they can make minimum payments on their existing loan. And that is pure evil.
no subject
no subject
no subject
I believe I have only once held a balance from one month to another, and that that balance was something of the order of ninepence; I suspect this has something to do with their reluctance to raise the limit.
I would say that an ethical credit-card company would *lower* the credit limit as soon as credit wasn't being paid off in full monthly, and make its profit on the merchant charges.
no subject
no subject
On two occasions, I've asked them to lower my limit. One one of those they didn't; on the other, they did so, then raised it again about 3 months later.
As these things go, my actual overdraft usage isn't that great. There's no way in Hell I need (or am going to use) a £5,000 overdraft limit; and given the fact that my fiscal self-discipline has been somewhat hard-won, I dislike the bank assuming that the lure of more spendable money is what I need.
no subject