Consumers are increasingly struggling to pay their credit card bills, raising concerns about severe delinquencies spiraling and sapping consumer spending.
Basically. However there are signs that is starting to recover like places lowering their prices. Home Depot has their best Memorial Day pricing I’ve seen in years.
Actually, unlike the bullshit articles we're fed that conflate the stock market and the economy... spiraling debt is a pretty serious marker of an unhealthy economy.
Granted it's a really fucking late sign and basically just indicates consumer goods are becoming out of reach price-wise.
People not being able to afford healthcare, housing, and necessary consumer goods like food and clothing? What? This is news to me! Have they tried not eating avocado toast? If they worked 15 minutes extra per day they'd be a billionaire in a year. People these days are so lazy and entitled!
Common interest rates of 30% plus, predatory offers, hell I get real checks in the mail from local loan companies. All you have to do is sign and deposit and you are to their ridiculous terms. The free market needs reigned in.
They keep the interest rate high to stop people from buying things. But the things we need to buy are food and the demand isn't going to fall. so people are using credit more than ever and they have no way to pay it back. The stocks have gone up but only because all these companies are in a position to skew us all now.
Consumer spending fuels economic growth...Job and wage growth helped counter the hit to consumers wallets from rising inflation, but a continued slowdown or reversal there could tip the scales...“While these indicators do not necessarily predict a recession, especially with a robust labor market, a weakening in employment conditions could exacerbate household financial instability,” said Gregory Daco, EY chief economist. “The combination of subdued job growth, sluggish income progression, and diminished savings could lead to increased delinquencies and a potential retrenchment in consumer spending.”...retail spending unexpectedly stalled in April in a sign of consumer fatigue and worry. Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, has said its customers are spending more on necessities and less on discretionary goods like home furnishings and electronics.
Why does no one talk about the cost of housing? Housing is astronomically expensive, and the more people have to spend for housing, the less they will have to spend on everything else.
Well, there's sucking at handling credit cards at 11% interest, and there's sucking at handling credit cards at 28% interest.
Not that I feel bad about it because I reached adulthood and learned my lesson with the 2007 recession, but young people are experiencing the double whammy of being the 'number go up' generation, with their parents and education completely failing to prepare them for number go down.
Now the only numbers that go up are cost of living and interest rates.
I've had credit card for 2 decades and don't think I've ever seen less than 20% interest, and I've got good credit. Though, I've also never really cared since I've never paid interest.
I'm 35. We took out a refi and paid off our credit card debts in 2019, and we were doing financially great for probably the first time in our adult lives. In the course of the last year, we've nearly maxed out most of our credit cards on living expenses. It's not only that the cost of living jumped up, but that our wages haven't gone up with it and our combined student loan load is like $1000/mo. There's also the creeping understanding that we're one big unexpected expense from disaster. I was really looking forward to taking the kids on their first real trip or something, but I guess we're just going to stay here and play Vidya until they're adults. But hey, glad to hear that the economy's doing great.