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		As Americans spend, credit card debt is ticking back up
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		 [September 27, 2021]  By 
		Chris Taylor 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Early in the pandemic, 
		there were encouraging and surprising signs about the decline of credit 
		card debt.
 
 Now, that trendline seems to be changing.
 
 Many Americans stayed at home at the start of COVID-19 and did not spend 
		like they usually do. They also received several rounds of emergency 
		cash assistance, helping to chop away at those credit-card bills, at 
		least temporarily.
 
 Spending is ticking back up – and the results are starting to show up on 
		our monthly statements.
 
 In fact, 42% of those with credit card debt, or 59 million Americans, 
		say they have added to their balances since the beginning of the 
		pandemic, according to a new study by personal finance site Bankrate.com.
 
		 
		"Things are better for some, but they are not better for everybody," 
		explains Ted Rossman, Bankrate’s senior industry analyst.
 The end of stimulus checks, expanded unemployment benefits and the 
		eviction moratorium does not bode well for debt management, Rossman 
		added.
 
 This trend reversal is reflected in the most recent numbers of the 
		Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Its Quarterly Report on Household Debt 
		and Credit found that credit-card bills rose by $17 billion in 2021’s 
		second quarter, to $790 billion nationally. That was the first uptick 
		after four straight quarters of declines.
 
 Also headed north were auto loans, by $33 billion in the quarter, and 
		mortgage debt, by $282 billion. All told it makes for total household 
		debt of $14.96 trillion, a quarterly rise of 2.1%.
 
 DIFFERENT DEBT, DIFFERENT STRATEGIES
 
 Of course, not all debt is the same, nor should it automatically be 
		considered a bad thing. The rise in mortgage debt can be attributed to 
		many people buying homes in a hot real estate market – and with interest 
		rates near historic lows, that is not necessarily a concern for 
		household balance sheets.
 
 Credit card debt is especially pernicious, though. It can be very 
		challenging to escape as balances rise to a certain level, combined with 
		sky-high interest on revolving debt – average rates are currently north 
		of 16%, according to Bankrate. Add in late fees or missed payments, and 
		the cycle is hard to break.
 
 Those concerns are highlighted in a recent survey by real estate firm 
		Clever. Almost one in five of those with credit card debt, 18%, report 
		having bills over $20,000. Meanwhile 40% of those who carry a monthly 
		balance haven’t been debt-free from credit cards since before 2018, and 
		15% have been struggling with it for more than 15 years.
 
		
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			Mastercard Inc. credit cards are displayed in this picture 
			illustration taken December 8, 2017. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/Illustration/File 
			Photo 
            
			 
		"We also found that 57% of people had missed a credit-card payment, and 
		the majority of those were in the past year," says Francesca Ortegren, 
		lead researcher for Clever. "It could cause a snowball effect over time, 
		and make it much harder to climb out."
 Chronic debt can make people feel pretty bleak. A third of those with 
		credit card debt think it will take at least a couple of years to pay it 
		off, and 20% say three years or more, according to Clever. Most 
		depressing of all, 3% think it will never be possible.
 
CHARTING A WAY OUT
 To be sure, there are glimmers of good news in the debt data. Even though credit 
card bills are once again headed back up, the early-pandemic declines means that 
total amounts are still $140 billion below the end of 2019's levels, according 
to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. And student loan debt actually dropped 
in the second quarter of 2021, by $14 billion.
 
 Meanwhile personal savings rates are still elevated, compared to historic norms. 
And debt delinquencies and defaults are relatively modest, notes Bankrate’s 
Rossman -- which is somewhat surprising, given the length and breadth of our 
ongoing pandemic crisis.
 
 What Rossman worries about: That our early-pandemic frugality will fall by the 
wayside, and the urge to get out and spend after being cooped up for so long 
will throw whatever progress we have made into reverse.
 
 
 
Instead, Americans should be proactive. He suggests: Take advantage of the 
growing number of 0% card balance-transfer offers, partner with nonprofit credit 
counselors like Money Management International or GreenPath, or pay off 
high-rate cards with a lower-rate personal loan.
 
 "It would be nice if we could keep lower balances as a part of our future," 
Rossman says. "You don’t want to throw that all away and run those balances 
right back up – because this is very expensive debt."
 
 (Editing by Lauren Young and Diane Craft; Follow us @ReutersMoney or at http://www.reuters.com/finance/personal-finance.)
 
				 
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