USA TODAY International Edition

Pandemic boosts millennial­s’ credit card debt

Survey: 56% of segment say their debt has grown

- Aimee Picchi

The pandemic’s economic hit is making an outsize impact on one generation’s debt: A greater share of millennial­s report they have added to their credit card debt since March compared with older generation­s.

About 56% of millennial­s say their credit card debt has grown since the start of the pandemic, compared with 53% of Generation Xers and 46% of baby boomers, according to a new survey from CreditCard­s. com. About 55% of millennial­s blamed the crisis for their snowballin­g balances, while fewer than half of Gen Xers and baby boomers pointed to the pandemic as the cause of their growing debt, according to the survey of 2,475 adults in mid- December.

The reason isn’t due to poor spending decisions but more likely stems from the pandemic’s greater financial impact on millennial­s compared with older generation­s, says Ted Rossman, CreditCard­s. com industry analyst. Millennial­s suffered a double whammy: The generation trailed in wealth creation in the years before the pandemic, and roughly 6 in 10 say they or a household member lost income from midMarch through mid- December, according to census data.

By comparison, 5 in 10 people ages 55 to 64 say they lost income during that same period, census data found.

“It really comes back to those two big factors: Millennial­s are the most likely to have had their income compromise­d and least likely to have adequate emergency savings,” Rossman says.

In the years leading up to the pandemic, the millennial generation fell behind by the yardsticks often used to measure economic progress, such as homeowners­hip and wealth. That

placed many of them in a more vulnerable financial position when the pandemic hit.

Though the generation as a whole has trailed older Americans in building wealth, there is a divide between millennial­s with and without college degrees. A Federal Reserve of St. Louis study found that college- educated millennial­s had about 6% less wealth than older generation­s at the same age, but those who had only high school degrees had 44% less wealth.

The pandemic has caused what some economists describe as a Kshaped recovery, in which wealthier

profession­als continue to work remotely while lower- paid workers in service jobs suffer higher rates of unemployme­nt.

That may explain somewhat conflicting credit card trends, Rossman says. Even though his company’s survey found 51% of Americans overall say they have added to their credit card debt since the pandemic began, the nation’s total credit card debt and delinquenc­ies declined, Rossman says.

“Higher- income folks have saved a lot because they are commuting less, going out to eat less – they can bank those savings,” Rossman says. “People in lower- income jobs, more service- oriented jobs, those are the people that are struggling the most and least equipped to handle a crisis like this.”

The two rounds of relief checks Congress approved helped many households weather the pandemic. Without that aid, it’s likely that even more Americans would have accrued new credit card debt, Rossman says.

Unfortunat­ely, it’s harder to secure a balance- transfer credit card than it was before the pandemic as credit card companies have tightened their standards, Rossman says. His advice to consumers who want to pare their debt: Consider transferri­ng debt to a lower interest- rate personal loan, or work with a nonprofit credit counselor to develop strategies to pay off debt.

“They can help you negotiate a lower rate and hold your hand through the consolidat­ion process,” he says.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Millennial­s blame the pandemic for their mountain of debt.
GETTY IMAGES Millennial­s blame the pandemic for their mountain of debt.

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