Sunderland Echo

Call for more reforms to help debt-hit

HIGH-CREDIT CRACKDOWN SPARKS PLEA FOR ACTION

- By Fiona Thompson fiona.thompson@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @fionathomp­sonjp

A range of measures to help those most at risk of using high-interest lending has led to calls for more to be done to help those likely to end up in a cycle of debt.

Sharon Hodgson, Labour MP for Washington and Sunderland West, has welcomed a crackdown on big-cost credit, but says yet further efforts could be made to ensure those most vulnerable do not end up in an ever-increasing spiral of financial trouble.

The measures are being made by the Finance Conduct Authority (FCA) in a bid to shield those most likely to find themselves in difficulty through overdraft charges, rent-to-own deals, doorstep lenders, store cards and catalogue shopping.

High-interest credit is said to be used by 3 million people in the UK, with single parents aged 18 to 34 more likely to use payday, doorstep or pawnbrokin­g loans than the national average.

Mrs Hodgson MP said: “I welcome the FCA report which supports Labour’s calls for more stringent action in the consumer credit market.

“Debt is a contributo­r to poor physical and mental health and can cause a breakdown in relationsh­ips.

“That is why it is important that we protect consumers from accumulati­ng high, and unnecessar­y, debt.

“I am disappoint­ed that the FCA has failed to introduce caps on overdraft interest and charges, as this would go further in protecting consumers from the misery of the debt trap.”

The FCA estimates banks made an estimated £2.3 billion in revenue from overdraft charges in 2016.

It is considerin­g measures to make it easier for customers to manage accounts, including mobile alerts warning of potential overdraft charges and stopping the inclusion of overdrafts in the term “available funds.”

In the home collected credit market, the watchdog is introducin­g requiremen­ts which will prevent firms from offering new loans or refinancin­g during visits without a customer request.

In catalogue credit and store cards, the FCA will ask firms to do more to help customers avoid persistent debt.

The FCA is also considerin­g imposing a cap on rentto-own merchants after finding costs can be exceptiona­lly high.

It cited examples of people having paid over £1,500 for an electric cooker which could be bought on the high street for less than £300.

The FCA believes its new measures will save customers up to £140 million a year.

Beyond that, it will consider more radical options to ban fixed fees and end the distinctio­ns around unarranged overdraft prices.

“It is important that we protect consumers”

SHARON HODGSON

 ??  ?? Labour MP Sharon Hodgson has said more action is needed to help people avoid getting into debt.
Labour MP Sharon Hodgson has said more action is needed to help people avoid getting into debt.

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