SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : Clown-Free Zone... sorry, no clowns allowed -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (106240)6/3/2001 4:48:35 PM
From: Lucretius  Respond to of 436258
 
yea, easy al RULES



To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (106240)6/3/2001 6:23:21 PM
From: jjetstream  Respond to of 436258
 
<<<Debt could swallow up consumer>>>

On target article from Sunday's Star Tribune, here in Minneapolis.....

Scariest point is the thought that *youth* sees a credit line as income........Got reality?????

Credit-card debt pushing youth into bankruptcy

Tiana Clemons got a Visa card five years ago when she was a senior at South High
School in Minneapolis. "I signed right up, and so did all my friends," she said, sitting in
the cramped, modest Maplewood apartment that she shares with her boyfriend, a
school-bus driver, and their three children. "We thought, 'Wow, a thousand bucks!' But
when we spent it, it didn't seem like real money."
Five years, four more credit cards and a painfully real $25,000 debt load later, Clemons,
now 22, saw no choice but to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy this past March because of
her inability to make even minimum payments on her debt.
Lawyers and credit counselors say Clemons is among the fastest-growing age group of
people opting for bankruptcy, primarily the result of credit-card debt.
"I was too young to handle it, to take it seriously," said Clemons, a full-time nursing
assistant who is currently on maternity leave. "I take responsibility for myself, but they
should take a look at people's incomes before they offer so much credit."
There are currently about 1.5 billion credit cards issued and $560 billion in outstanding
credit card debt in the United States.
An increasing proportion of the debt belongs to people in their late teens and early 20s.
The fastest-growing group of bankruptcy filers is under 25, said Robert Manning, a
sociology professor at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Manning, author of
"Credit Card Nation: The Consequences of America's Addiction to Credit," said that
young consumers "are being given the keys to the car before they've learned how to
drive."
The University of Minnesota is so concerned about the emotional effect of debt on
students that the on-campus Bonyton Health Clinic now offers financial counseling,
through a grant from Lutheran Brotherhood.
Chapter 7 popular
The U.S. federal bankruptcy court system does not keep records by age, but Twin Cities
lawyers who specialize in bankruptcy report a rise in the number of young adults using
their services.
Jack Prescott, whose Prescott and Pearson firm handles 20 percent of all Minnesota
bankruptcy cases, said that about a fifth of his clients are in their 20s, a trend he began
noticing "about eight years ago, when they started giving credit cards to anyone but dogs
and cats and 4-year-olds."
About 70 percent of personal-bankruptcy filers in Minnesota choose Chapter 7, which
absolves them of debt with minimal penalty. Under Chapter 13, the filer must eventually
pay back some of the debt.
The Consumer Federation of America reports that the average college graduate has two
credit cards and is carrying an average balance of $2,500 on each of them. Add to that
student loans -- exempt from bankruptcy -- car payments, rent, utilities, taxes and
interest, and few starting salaries are going to be high enough to cover anything beyond
minimum payments.
"Kids' access to credit is way too easy," said Paula Langguth Ryan, who wrote "How to
Bounce Back from Bankruptcy." "The [credit-card companies] have figured out that
high school seniors and college students have the most disposable income."
Ryan declared bankruptcy in 1986, when she was 21, living in New York City and was
$35,000 in the hole. "When you're young, it's so much easier to get in over your head,"
she said. "If you have a $12,000 income and a $15,000 line of credit, you see it as a
$27,000 income."

Compounding the problem for young debtors, said Ryan, is that as they establish their
independence, "they don't want to admit to their parents that they've gotten in over their
heads.
"Money is still the one thing we won't talk to our kids about," Ryan said. "In school,
they're taught civics and economics, when what they really need to know is how to
balance a checkbook."
State Sen. Steve Dille (R-Dassel) agrees. His bill requiring courses in personal-finance
management to be part of public school curriculums is now before the Legislature.
Education may be even more important since President Bush signed a bill in April
making it more difficult for anyone to file for bankruptcy.
Even young adults who seem to have it made financially can spiral into the poorhouse.
Take the case of Jeremie Calvin, a 26-year-old from Burnsville who didn't have to work
at all, until recently.
While supporting himself on the $1,900 per month he was receiving from a court
settlement over a childhood injury that left him blind in one eye, Calvin decided to start a
pay-phone business. He maxed out several credit cards buying the necessary equipment.
Because of his inexperience and some bad advice, he said, he wound up nearly $40,000
in debt. He filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy last fall. He's now in school, studying
local-area computer networking, and working as a restaurant cook in Eden Prairie. He
lost his late-model pickup truck, and now drives "about a $200 vehicle."
"I didn't look before I leaped, and now I have a terrible credit rating," he said. "But I
was in so deep, all I could do was start over."
Going to school
Lenders claim that they promote financial responsibility along with their cards. "We
review all applicants carefully, and make great effort to help college students use their
credit wisely," said Darrell Coleman, marketing manager for Wells Fargo Card Services.
"We want to build long-term relationships with [new customers]."
The college market has been expanding for several years, he said, "and we are not out of
line with that expansion." Of Wells Fargo's 4.4 million cardholders, 294,000 are college
students.
But lawyers helping recent college graduates and others new to self-support crawl out
from under paper mountains of overdue bills say that many lenders are indiscriminate.
"It's like keeping liquor stores open 24-7, selling to minors, then wondering why
everybody's drunk all the time," said Rob Hoglund, a partner at the Roseville office of
Hoglund Chwialkowski & Greeman, who is Clemons' and Calvin's attorney.
Manning, who has been criticized by lenders for what they see as an abdication of the
role that personal responsibility plays in debt, maintains that "the companies feel
victimized, but they are the real catalysts of the problem." An example, he says, is what
he sees as a ploy to hook college students: "If you're 20 years old and make $25,000 a
year working full time, they'll only offer you a $500 limit. But if you're in college, even
if you've never had a job, you can get up to $5,000."
Clemons advises young credit applicants to "wait till they know the meaning of a bad
credit report" before getting charge-happy. Neither she nor Calvin have any credit cards
at the moment -- but the offers keep on coming, in the mail and over the Internet.
Ryan's advice? "If you can't pay your balance in full each month, put those cards in a
Ziploc bag, put the bag in a glass of water and put the glass in your freezer."

startribune.com