The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Scots face debt longer as costs soar

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Scots in debt face the prospect of being trapped by soaring supermarke­t and energy prices, an advice charity has found.

Citizens Advice Scotland warned yesterday that half of its most complex debt cases have no cash to pay off the money they owe once they cover essentials, leading to calls to increase benefits “in line with the cost of living at least”.

Jemiel Benison, the organisati­on’s financial health spokesman, warned that “people in debt face the prospect of being trapped into longer repayment periods because of the cost-of-living crisis”.

“What we see is more people with no money left every month not able to pay down their debt – so facing longer periods to clear it,” he said.

“Those with disposable income every month had seen a huge drop, just as prices and bills soar.”

According to the charity’s living standards report, between spring this year and last there had been a rise in clients paying out more than they earn each month, an increase from 42% to 48%.

One in two people they see with complex money issues also have no cash to pay down their debts after covering the essentials.

And, the advice charity found, disposable income had plunged in the year by £80, falling from an average of £228 in 2020-21 to £148 the following year.

But the situation could deteriorat­e, Mr Benison warned.

“This data is from spring 2021 to earlier this year – so people in debt were already feeling the impact of the cost-of-living crisis,” he said. “If the worst is to come in terms of inflation or a recession, that is very worrying indeed.”

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