USA TODAY International Edition

Credit card debts harder to pay down

Amid rising interest rates, Americans falling behind

- Elisabeth Buchwald

After Kathleen Immel Cross and her husband paid off more than $ 21,000 in credit card debt they had accumulate­d in 2018, she made a promise to herself.

The couple, with a household income of around $ 72,000, would stay out of debt so they could retire without the burden of owing so much money.

To make good on her resolution, she canceled many of the credit cards that led to their overspendi­ng; she vowed to use the remaining ones for small purchases and to maintain a credit record; and she adopted a “cash and carry” lifestyle, she said, in which she and her husband would only buy what they could afford with the money in their wallets. The strategy worked. Then the doctors’ bills arrived.

Immel Cross, 55, had three surgeries in the middle of 2021. Because she didn’t have cash to cover them, she put $ 600 on one of her credit cards, she told USA TODAY.

Considerin­g the enormous debt she had recently paid off, the amount felt small. She’d pay it off in no time, thought Immel Cross, who earns $ 17 an hour working at a convenienc­e store near Birmingham, Alabama.

But she and her husband couldn’t catch a break. Inflation had been low when they had finished paying off their earlier debt. But as the economy recovered from the pandemic, prices began to build up.

Their electric bill rose. Then gas and groceries went up. “Things just kept getting more expensive and worse,” she said.

The $ 600 quickly became $ 3,200, her balance that is poised to keep growing. “We have started having to charge necessitie­s back on the credit card,” she said.

Inflation, which has now been at historical­ly high levels for almost two years, is eroding the value of

Americans’ paychecks, leaving millions of Americans like Immel Cross and her husband in debt trying to close the gap between what they once could afford and what they struggle to pay now.

To make up that difference, they are leaning on credit cards and falling behind on payments. Credit card debt hit a record of nearly $ 1 trillion last quarter, a $ 394 billion increase from the prior three months, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Despite a low unemployme­nt rate in the U. S., “stubbornly high prices and climbing interest rates may be testing some borrowers’ ability to repay their debts,” Wilbert van der Klaauw, economic research adviser at the New York Fed, said in a statement.

How did credit card debt get so high?

During the pandemic, millions of Americans paid off credit card debt with stimulus money they received. At the same time, they avoided accumulati­ng more debt because lockdowns and restrictio­ns prevented them from spending money on things like vacations.

That led to a drastic decline in balances. From the last quarter of 2019 to the first quarter of 2021, credit card debt declined from $ 930 billion to $ 770 billion, a 17% decrease.

Along with lowering their overall credit card debt, Americans also got better at paying their full monthly bill on time during the crisis.

Two years into the pandemic, the percentage of U. S. credit card balances that were seriously delinquent – or more than 90 days late – fell to 3% compared to 5% before the pandemic.

Now that percentage is starting to creep up again and stands at more than 4%.

Seriously delinquent payments can substantia­lly lower a person’s credit score because credit card companies are required to report missed payments to credit bureaus. Typically, the lower your score is, the harder and more expensive it becomes to get access to new lines of credit, like a mortgage or another credit card.

Serious delinquenc­ies are highest for Americans ages 18 to 29 at 7.6%. That’s followed by 30 to 39- year- olds at 5.7%.

New York Fed researcher­s said it’s “particular­ly concerning” that younger borrowers have the highest rates of credit card delinquenc­ies. That’s because they’re more likely to have student loan debt in addition to mortgage obligation­s.

The pause on student loan payments, which has been in effect for nearly three years as part of emergency pandemic relief measures, is set to be lifted in two months. That will add to many Americans’ debt obligation­s and potentiall­y drive those delinquenc­y rates even higher, the researcher­s said in a blog post.

Increases in credit card debt historical­ly weigh more on low- and middleinco­me households who are more likely to carry a balance from month to month, according to Federal Reserve data. And while Black and Hispanic families are less likely to own a credit card than white and Asian households, they are much more likely to carry a balance and are denied other forms of credit across all income levels more often, according to the Fed.

Credit scores improved

Because Americans were paying off debts and making more on- time payments to lenders, credit scores improved during the pandemic. The average FICO credit score rose from 703 to 714, according to Experian data.

Keishanda Dunlap’s score began to rise when she received enhanced unemployme­nt benefits during the health crisis.

Dunlap, 35, who was working as a licensed life insurance policy salesperso­n before the pandemic, wasn’t able to travel to meet clients and saw a massive drop in her income and was eventually laid off in 2020. But the enhanced unemployme­nt benefits, which gave recipients an extra $ 600 a week, helped her stay afloat.

While unemployed she decided she wanted to boost her credit score of 620, which the industry considers “fair,” in order to increase her lines of credit.

She used various strategies that allowed her to improve her credit score by 60 points. As a result, her line of credit rose from $ 500 to $ 10,000.

But eventually, her debt ballooned to $ 10,000 partly as a result of redesignin­g her living room and traveling to visit her cousin in Hawaii, which she said helped her cope with the COVID- 19- induced depression she experience­d.

Dunlap, who lives in Los Angeles and says she is now ready to return to work, pays more than the minimum required monthly payment but is adding to her debt because she needs to purchase gas and groceries.

She thinks it will take around six months to pay off her debt. Based on her prior experience, selling life insurance policies can be quite lucrative, she said. The sale of a typical policy could earn her upwards of $ 1,200.

She has no savings after exhausting the $ 4,000 she accumulate­d during the pandemic. Anything she earns once she returns to work will go toward paying her bills and credit card debt.

Dunlap’s depleted savings mirrors what many Americans are experienci­ng. In April 2020, they were saving one- third of their disposable income, according to the U. S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. As of January, their personal savings rate hovered just below 5%.

Average credit card interest rate is climbing

Credit card rates have risen since the Federal Reserve began its campaign to fight high inflation by raising its key interest rate. When the Fed raises rates, it becomes more expensive for banks to borrow money from one another. They pass on the added expense to consumers by raising the interest rates they charge on mortgages, loans and credit cards.

At the start of the pandemic, average credit card rates hovered around 16%. They’re above 20%, according to Creditcard­s. com data.

That in itself is making it harder for credit card users to make timely payments since it makes it more expensive.

The interest charged on outstandin­g balances will only continue to go up until the Fed stops hiking or cuts interest rates. That’s not likely to happen soon since inflation is at more than three times the Fed’s 2% target level and job openings remain plentiful.

To lower the interest she’s accruing on her outstandin­g debt, Immel Cross of Alabama said she’s making double her monthly minimum payment.

That said, she feels a mounting level of financial stress.

“We’re getting one message out of the White House that things have never been better. But this is not what I’m seeing now,” said Immel Cross, who volunteers at a food bank twice a month and said lines are going around the block lately.

“Obviously, they’re not in great financial shape either.”

 ?? BOB FARLEY/ FOR USA TODAY ?? Kathleen Immel Cross stands in front of her home in Pinson, Ala. She is saving up money to put on a tin roof on her storm- damaged house.
BOB FARLEY/ FOR USA TODAY Kathleen Immel Cross stands in front of her home in Pinson, Ala. She is saving up money to put on a tin roof on her storm- damaged house.
 ?? ROBERT HANASHIRO/ USA TODAY ?? Keishanda Dunlap, shown in her home in Los Angeles, accumulate­d credit card debt to remodel the studio apartment she rents.
ROBERT HANASHIRO/ USA TODAY Keishanda Dunlap, shown in her home in Los Angeles, accumulate­d credit card debt to remodel the studio apartment she rents.
 ?? BOB FARLEY/ FOR USA TODAY ?? Kathleen Immel Cross sorts through the day’s mail, including some bills, at her home in Pinson, Ala. After paying off more $ 21,000 in credit card debt in 2018, she’s starting to take on debt again due to medical procedures along with everyday necessitie­s.
BOB FARLEY/ FOR USA TODAY Kathleen Immel Cross sorts through the day’s mail, including some bills, at her home in Pinson, Ala. After paying off more $ 21,000 in credit card debt in 2018, she’s starting to take on debt again due to medical procedures along with everyday necessitie­s.

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