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Washington Post: Consumers Keep Paying Off Credit Cards, Building Up Savings

QUOTE
Excerpt:

Consumers continued to retrench in August, with borrowers reducing their credit card debt for the 11th consecutive month, according to figures released by the Federal Reserve on Wednesday.

Consumer advocates and industry experts attribute the drop in credit card debt to uncertainly over jobs and rising interest rates. Many card companies have increased interest rates in anticipation of a new law that takes effect in February that will limit their ability to raise rates and fees.

"The recession has led to changes in spending and saving habits for consumers," said Travis Plunkett, legislative director for the Consumer Federation of America. "In other words, consumers are starting to get their financial houses in order, and that means reducing their use of credit."

Indeed, the personal savings rate climbed to 4.2 percent in July, according to government data, up from the near-zero levels of just a few years ago.

"Consumers are making rational choices in a down economy -- they're saving more and spending less," said Kenneth J. Clayton, senior vice president and general counsel for card policy at the American Bankers Association. However, he said, "credit cards remain a viable option, but just merely one of many available to consumers."
BlueTDimly
Kind of sad that much of our economy assumes a huge level of overspending and lack of saving.
kas
Consumers spending for September was down; according to what reported on TV this morning. There's is an expectation that merchants will scale back what they will order for the Holidays and avoid price cuts. IMHO, there seems to be a growing backlash against fisical irresponsibility.
kar522
My spending was up in September, and I used my CC a bunch...but it's scheduled to be paid off next week...plus we took out a car loan... bang.gif But it's only for 18 months...

In the past, no matter how broke we might have been, we always saved 10% of our paychecks up front...we never missed it...
carloscai
Congrats on the new car, Nana. Spending is for better savings, you know. tongue.gif
kar522
QUOTE (carloscai @ 10-8-09, 1:20pm) *
Congrats on the new car, Nana. Spending is for better savings, you know. tongue.gif


It's a '99 Taurus...I'm still trying to figure out all those buttons... noclue.gif

Plus, I might have to break down and buy some CDs...
garsh
QUOTE (kar522 @ 10-8-09, 2:30pm) *
Plus, I might have to break down and buy some CDs...

Buy these, then have the grandkids fill them up for you. wink.gif
Nack
I don't think using a credit card is a bad thing necessarily, it's running up credit card debt that is bad. As long as you pay it off every month, using a credit card can be very rewarding. I'm about to go on a free cruise thanks to credit card rewards.
carloscai
Free cruise for Nack! Wow~ I can see what's coming in Boston's newspaper:

Florida Public Servant Spending Like Crazy!

lol.gif

To be serious, I have accumulated some many points with the Citi’s thank-you network yet their rewards are so lackluster. –bang-
threeuncle
That is a problem for the CC banks for no profit. And most likely that will propagate to us (end users) since on profit means no reward. bang.gif
Alan
Nice to see people acting on the kind of advice their grandmothers would give - save more and spend less wink.gif Sure, that doesn't do well for the economy, but the economy was out of control leading up to this. It had to pull way back and regroup in order to move forward again.

Personally, I don't believe it's over yet. I think there will still be high unemployment over the next 2-3 years, then we will see gradual growth.
mydeal
QUOTE (Alan @ 10-8-09, 9:08pm) *
Nice to see people acting on the kind of advice their grandmothers would give - save more and spend less wink.gif Sure, that doesn't do well for the economy, but the economy was out of control leading up to this. It had to pull way back and regroup in order to move forward again.

Personally, I don't believe it's over yet. I think there will still be high unemployment over the next 2-3 years, then we will see gradual growth.

Can't disagree with any of this.
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