USA TODAY International Edition

Power to borrow can ease the strain

Access to credit is a sign of one’s financial health

- Russ Wiles

Like many Americans, Chris Gray got into financial trouble when he accumulate­d large medical expenses – in his case, for hip surgery four years ago.

“The medical bills just start piling up, especially if you can’t work,” said Gray, 37, of Phoenix, who works in sales and delivery for a flooring company. “You burn through your emergency savings.”

Gray’s credit score dropped into the subprime category, which made it harder to get loans at attractive rates of interest. He wound up borrowing cash using payday-advance and title-loan services.

Gray now is paying down his debts, often working 60 hours a week at his regular job and a side gig, but his financial life still isn’t back to where he wants it to be. Having a subprime credit score has limited his options.

“Until I have a great credit score, (a convention­al bank loan) isn’t going to happen,” he said.

Access to credit in a pinch

When most Americans think about being middle class, they usually visualize having a certain level of income and material possession­s such as a car or house. But another way to think about it is having the ability to borrow money, if you need to, at affordable rates of interest.

“The new middle-class divider is access to credit,” said Jonathan Walker, executive director of Elevate’s Center for the New Middle Class, a research and advocacy group. “When unexpected expenses pop up, they can become a crisis if you don’t have access to credit.”

Having access to credit doesn’t necessaril­y mean using it or abusing it. A small slice of Americans are sufficient­ly wealthy that they don’t need to borrow money. But for most of the rest,

good credit is not only desirable but represents an important financial backstop.

Perils of low credit scores

People with subprime credit scores – generally below 650 to 700 on the standard FICO scale of 300 to 850 – often can’t borrow inexpensiv­ely when they need cash, whether to build up their assets (such as by purchasing a home) or to meet emergency medical, auto-repair or other big-ticket expenses.

That means they might need to resort to high-cost borrowing in a pinch, or do without.

Some 160 million Americans have subprime scores or no credit scores, according to research cited by Walker’s group. Usually, this is because they already have fallen behind on bills, missed payments or filed for bankruptcy. When new expenses arrive, they often have trouble meeting them. “Anyone who has to pay 400% annual interest (for a payday-type loan) probably isn’t going to be able to pay it off quickly,” said Mike Sullivan, a personal-finance consultant at Take Charge America, a Phoenix-based credit-counseling company. “Once you’re dealing with payday loans, it’s difficult to get out.”

Struggling middle-class Americans, unlike the poor, often don’t know about various safety net programs such as government-subsidized food or medical programs. Either that, or they don’t think they would qualify or are too embarrasse­d to request help, often viewing their difficulties as temporary, Walker said.

About 30% of adults are within three paychecks of needing to borrow money or missing payments on bills, according to a new Northweste­rn Mutual study.

What pushes debtors over the edge

A lot of factors can get people into trouble, but two factors stand out. One is a reduction of work hours, which was cited by 55% of nonprime respondent­s in a May survey conducted by Walker’s group. Another 24% cited medical bills as the primary cause.

Secondary factors included a big car repair (11%), leaving home for the first time (6%) and paying for a child’s college expenses (5%).

But rather than any one thing, it’s often a combinatio­n of pressures that push people into financial hot water and damage their credit. Of those survey respondent­s who cited medical costs as the primary catalyst, three in four also said they had suffered an income drop, which made it harder to handle those medical bills.

People with subprime credit scores said unexpected costs amounting to more than about 30% of their monthly income would be enough to disrupt their finances significantly. On average, it would take an average of just $1,400 or so in new obligation­s to push a lot of these cash-strapped individual­s over the edge.

Side jobs might not help

So why not just grab an extra side job to help make ends meet? Some people do pursue gig jobs – and new cellphone apps make it easier to find short-term work quickly.

“But it’s not so easy if you’re a single parent and have to pay child care and might not have a great car to get around,” said Sullivan. “The gig economy isn’t so welcoming for a lot of people living on the edge.”

Cash-strapped individual­s who are unable or unwilling to borrow at high interest rates sometimes instead reach out to family or friends for help.

If you find yourself hitting up friends or relatives for cash, it could be a sign that you have dropped out of the middle class.

Correction­s & Clarifications

A June 24 story on 10 years after the Great Recession included a graphic with incorrect informatio­n. According to the 2018 Financial Capability study from FINRA Investor Education Foundation, the percentage of survey respondent­s with college degrees who had difficulty paying their bills declined to 34% in 2018 from 49% in 2009. The percentage of respondent­s with no college degrees who had difficulty paying their bills declined to 52% in 2018 from 66% in 2009.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Your credit score may include factors beyond your finances.
GETTY IMAGES Your credit score may include factors beyond your finances.

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