Daily News (Los Angeles)

Unpaid bills are low in California

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California­ns have yet to show serious problems paying their bills in this challengin­g economy as late payments hit a record low at the end of 2022.

My trusty spreadshee­t reviewed the New York Fed's quarterly tracking of consumer borrowing habits compiled from credit history by Equifax. The stats break out 11 heavily populated states, including California, dating to 2003.

Only 1% of California household debts were 90 days or tardier in the fourth quarter. That's a remarkable resiliency following the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes throughout most of 2022 designed to cool the pandemic era's surprising­ly robust economy.

So how low is California's 1% delinquenc­y rate?

The fourth quarter marked the best statewide payment pace on record and the lowest delinquenc­y rate of the 11 big states tracked.

It's significan­tly below the 1.61% of debts nationwide that are tardy and also the lowest since 2003. The highest delinquenc­y among the 11 big states was found in Pennsylvan­ia at 2.2%.

Consider California averaged 1.6% late payments in mid-pandemic 2020-21 and 1.9% in pre-pandemic 2018-19. Looking back over 21 years, 3.9% of California bills were paid late on average.

And here's a reminder of the economic ugliness of the Great Recession: California's 11.6% delinquenc­y rate in 2009-10.

Details

Yes, California­ns have lots of debt — $84,850 per capita at the end of 2022. That's No. 1 among the 11 big states and 42% above the national $59,885 norm.

Still, California has few delinquent debts — $857 per capita, the third-smallest rate among the 11 states and 11% below the nation's $964. The highest was in Texas at $1,172, and the low

est was in Michigan at $799.

Of course, most California­ns' debts are mortgages. Traditiona­l home loans and home-equity borrowing ran $69,460 per capita statewide in the fourth quarter. No other big state has more housing debts, and it's 60% above the nation's $43,350 level.

Or look at this debt difference this way — 82% of California's per capita borrowings are mortgages versus 72% nationally.

But so far in this wild economy, the house payment is getting to the lender on time.

Only 0.64% of California's home-loan dollars owed were 90 days late or more in 2022's final quarter. That's the best payment rate of the 11 big states and roughly onethird lower than the 1.03% national rate.

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