Adverse
debt levels blight UK consumers personal finances
Released on
= August 2, 2005, 9:02 am
Press Release
Author = Richard Green
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = UK debt is out of control with many loan providers taking
advantage to increase profits, however recent changes in the financial
services industry may protect some of the most vulnerable.
Press Release
Body = Debt levels are at an all time high in the UK. The younger
generation tend to be feeling the pinch the most, but parents are
increasingly being required to bail them out, often at great expense
to their own limited mortgage or
retirement savings.
It has become
almost accepted as a fact of life that graduates will begin their
careers with a considerable level of personal debt. The Association
of Investment
Trust Companies found that on average students expected to graduate
with £7,208 of debt, while parents believed it would be nearer
to £9,741, however the real average was found to be currently
running at £13,501. Graduates then need to service credit
cards, take out a mortgage, then cover the payments, repay university
loans, not to mention the pressure to start saving earlier, and
save more, for their retirement, whilst the basic state pension
increasingly becomes inadequate. The government
revealed in June that student debt for 2003-04 was seven times higher
than they were in 1994-95 and the Student Loans Company has shown
that debts owed to them has risen to more than £13bn.
It is not only
students who face financial difficulties early in life. Consumer
Credit Counselling Services – Scotland ( http://www.cccs.co.uk/
), has indicated
that young adults in general, under the age of 25, now account for
more than 10 per cent of the estimated 32,000 people who have fallen
into severe arrears on non-mortgage debts of more than £1
billion.
Malcolm Hurlston,
Chairman of the Consumer Credit Counselling Services (CCCS) said,
"It is noticeable that young people are accounting for an increasing
proportion and the number of them seeking assistance has risen by
about 25 per cent over the past two years or so."
Analysts have
been bracing themselves for news of a sharp increase in adverse
debt levels from the major high street banks following report figures
of a 21 per cent increase in bad debts levels at Lloyds TSB. City
analysts expect HBOS and Royal Bank of Scotland to declare that
bad debt charges have risen by around 20% in their personal banking
businesses, and Barclays, HSBC and Alliance & Leicester are
all
expected to tell a similar tale of rising loan defaults. Citigroup
analysts are expecting bad debt charges from its retail banking
division to rise about 24% in the first half of this year to £230m,
while last year HBOS’s provisions for bad debt rose from £1bn
to £1.2bn.
Keith Stevens,
of the chartered accountants firm Wilkins Kennedy ( http://www.wilkinskennedy.com/
), said: "Creditors profit by lending money to people
and collecting interest, and the longer they can keep that cycle
going the better for them. Unless borrowers own property of significant
value, it’s often not in
creditors’ interest to call in their debts." He also
continued that he believed some creditors were increasingly taking
a hands-off approach, allowing debtors to pile up large amounts
of debt, and then collecting interest and penalty charges for as
long as borrowers were able to continue paying. This has lead to
an increase in the number of borrowers filing for bankruptcy themselves
when previously they would
have been forced into it earlier by their lenders.
House repossessions
have also significantly increased over the past year, with the Council
of Mortgage Lenders announcing 4,640 home repossessions during the
first half of 2005, compared with 3,070 for the last half of 2004.
Government figures show that there has also been an increase in
the number of homeowners being taken to court for mortgage arrears.
Some of the
major banks and financial service providers have taken the initiative
and started to help police the growing adverse debt problems with
HSBC announcing that it will share their full credit record, of
both positive and negative information, on its personal customers
with other regulated financial services companies through the Experian,
Equifax and CallCredit credit reference agencies, in efforts to
keep tabs on its consumers' debt.
Michael Geoghegan,
Chief Executive of HSBC said: "It is no more in the interests
of a customer to borrow more money than they can afford than it
is for a bank to lend them the money." The move has been widely
heralded by analysts, as Michael Geoghegan added, "It is the
only way to ensure that lenders properly understand the full financial
exposure of customers before they let them sign up to debt that
some
simply can't afford."
This all comes
amidst media pressure for financial firms to become more responsible.
One case widely featured in the news concerns a couple who took
out the £5,740 loan at 34.9% APR for house improvements, but
they were already in arrears on two prior mortgages, and became
unable to keep up the loan repayments. Over the course of the
15 year loan term the amount repayable had escalated to £384,000.
Attempts by the
loan company to still enforce the huge debt, eventually had to be
fought off by the
couple through the law courts.
The couple urged
others considering taking out a loan to seek advice and to, "obviously
read the small print and ask the questions that perhaps you don't
think
about at the time, and just make sure you know exactly what the
consequences are should anything go wrong".
There are currently
many sources of information to help consumers make decisions regarding
their finances and debt levels. Financial comparison sites like
Moneynet ( http://moneynet.co.uk/ ) can provide impartial information
on loans, mortgages,
adverse credit, etc, to find the best product for individual circumstances.
Consumer help sites like the National Debtline ( http://www.nationaldebtline.co.uk/
) provide free confidential and independent advice on how to deal
with debt problems, and the Citizens Advice Bureau ( http://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/
) are there with trained volunteers to help with legal, monetary
and other problems, through a free, independent and confidential
advice service.
The more help
and information that is available to consumers and the more responsible
the lending agencies become, the safer finance will be for the most
vulnerable who are looking to borrow money, to prevent them getting
into un-repayable levels of debt, however these services can only
be of help if people
actually use them.
Malcolm Hurlston
of CCCS said, "We are advising about 4,000 people in Scotland
and I would estimate that our figures represent only about one in
eight of those who need help".
Financial education
is something needs to be provided at an early stage to make people
realise the importance of taking on the accountability for their
own finances, as well as highlighting where to access help for when
it is required. Budgeting is a subject many school leavers have
little practical knowledge of, but one which they desperately need
to be made aware of before they start to control their own finances.
Where there
is existing advice or help, this must be made available and known
to all in order to prevent more people getting too deeply into debt,
or falling prey to loan sharks like the recent case of Mark Washington
Johnson who has been jailed in
Birmingham for nearly four years. Mr Johnson was found guilty of
charging up to 8,000 per cent interest on loans, taking Social Security
benefit books or National Insurance numbers as "security"
for the unauthorised loans and then piling on default charges for
missed payments. If we are to prevent this sort of abuse occurring
to the weakest members of society then public awareness needs to
be raised and the most vulnerable people given the assistance best
suited to understand and control their own money.
Released by
bigmouthmedia ( http://www.bigmouthmedia.com )
Web Site = http://www.bigmouthmedia.com
Contact Details
= Website: http://www.bigmouthmedia.com
Bigmouthmedia head office:
51 Timberbush
Edinburgh
EH6 6QH
Strategic Link Builder
E-mail: info@bigmouthmedia.com,
Telephone: 0845 130 0022
Printer
Friendly Format
Back to previous
page...
Back to home page...
Submit your
press releases...
|