For those who huffed and puffed about my comment let me clarify something.
There are people that use credit cards and pay off the balances every month. My SIL & BIL are 2 that I know of. I'm glad that you can be responsible enough to do that. However the percentage of people that do is only 1% to 2% of the entire credit card holding population. That means that 98% to 99% of people who use credit cards have balances that roll over to the following month and accrue interest. The average credit card debt that American households have is around $35,000. That's CC debt alone. That does not include other loans or lines of credit for cars, boats, houses, etc. It still means that there are millions of people in this country who have debt. Did you know that only 4% of the population is debt free (minus mortgage) and has at least $10,000 in a bank account? What's wrong with that picture? The fact of the matter is that CC's give you the flexibility to buy things that you might normally not have bought if you were paying for them outright regardless of whether or not you pay off the balance. That's how people end up with CC debt in the first place.
Where are you getting these statistics?
From TransUnion (June 2008): National average credit card debt per credit card borrower dropped 1.25 percent from the previous quarter's $1,694 total to $1,673, though the total remains 5.6 percent higher than the same period last year ($1,584).
http://newsroom.transunion.com/index.php?s=43&item=476
From the credit card industry:
http://www.creditcards.com/credit-c...ustry-facts-personal-debt-statistics-1276.php
Sources cited within.
--Approximately 74.9% of the U.S. families surveyed in 2004 had credit cards, and 58% of those families carried a balance. In 2001, 76.2% of families had creditcards, and 55% of those families carried a balance. (Source: Federal Reserve Bulletin, February 2006.) 58% of 75% is 44% of the country carrying cc debt.
--The majority of U.S. households have no credit card debt (Source: Federal Reserve Board's Survey of Consumer Finances, 2004)
--Of the households that do owe money on credit cards, the median balance was $2,200 -- meaning half owe more, half less (Source: Federal Reserve Board's Survey of Consumer Finances, 2004) Disagrees with TransUnion, but still a fraction of the claimed $35,000.
--Only 8.3 percent of households owe $9,000 or more on their cards (Source: Federal Reserve Board's Survey of Consumer Finances, 2004)
--National average credit card debt per credit card borrower is $1,673 (TransUnion, June 2008)
--About 40 percent of credit card holders carry a balance of less than $1,000. About 15 percent are far less conservative in their use of credit cards and have total card balances in excess of $10,000. When you look at the total of all credit obligations combined (except mortgage loans), 48 percent of consumers carry less than $5,000 of debt. This includes all credit cards, lines of credit and loans -- everything but mortgages. Nearly 37 percent carry more than $10,000 of nonmortgage debt as reported to the credit bureaus. (Source: myfico.com)
--The typical consumer has access to approximately $19,000 on all credit cards combined. More than half of all people with credit cards are using less than 30 percent of their total credit card limit. Just over one in seven is using 80 percent or more of their credit card limit (Source: myfico.com). (If the average household only has access to $19k in credit, how is the average debt $35k?)
Granted, some of this info is up to 4 years old; however, I doubt that the average household cc debt has increased by nearly 15-fold in that time. Nor do I believe that the percentage of households carrying cc debt has gone from 44% to 98%.
If you can't handle the responsibility that comes with having a credit card, don't get one. Actually, I applaud you for staying away from ccs and not becoming yet another poster asking for bankruptcy advice/encouragement. But, don't try to make it sound like the rest of the world has the same issue.
The fact is, the majority of Americans manage their credit card debt. Using a credit card responsibly to pay your day to day expenses is a financially sound decision. I'm floated an interest-free loan every day for everything I buy. Money doesn't leave my bank account for anywhere from 28 to 58 days after I make a purchase. It collects interest for me during that time. I have a record of what I spent and where. I have customer service reps ready to help me solve disputes. Had I written a check? Too bad, so sad. I have fraud protection if my card is lost or stolen. Not with a checkbook. The list goes on and on.
hoosiergirl7, as you can see, I'm a facts type of person. If you've got some citations to back up your assertions about consumer cc debt, I would be very interested in seeing them. (I'm betting I don't, though.)