The SmartyPig Blog

No Such Thing as a Free Lunch

Past Due

Credit card companies have situated themselves smack dab in the middle of college campuses across the country and have set the bait for uninformed, sometimes naive and ignorant students, fresh on the college scene. In a recent Newsweek article, author Kurt Soller examines the effects on credit card companies’ invasion on college towns. Luring uninformed kids in with small incentives such as free sandwiches or coupons, they cast a line and, sadly, far too often reel ‘em in. Within months some of those kids are up to their eyeballs in debt from trying to keep up with the crowd. The credit card companies offer “freedom.” What a majority of students end up with is a form of debt jail. As the old saying goes, “There is no such thing as a free lunch.”

According to Experian, of all college seniors, 96% have credit cards, and the average indebted young adult spends 25 cents of every dollar paying back debt. Factor in taxes from a first job, and it’s going to take you some time to simply get out from under. A survey conducted by Transunion.com stated for the third quarter of 2008 that the average bankcard borrower debt increased nationally 1.57 percent to $5,710 from the previous quarter’s $5,621, and 6.0 percent compared to the third quarter of 2007 ($5,387). And delinquency is on the rise as well. Nationally, the ratio of bankcard borrowers delinquent on one or more of their bankcards increased in the third quarter of 2008, up 4.8 percent over the previous quarter. And on a year-over-year basis the national delinquency incidence rate has risen 5.8 percent. Staggering, huh? Well, just think of the billions credit card companies are raking in on late fees as the cherry on top.

SmartyPig is a solution to this debt dilemma plaguing campuses and households alike. Paying exorbitant interest, and more often than not, making only a minimum monthly payment leads to years of heartache. By saving with SmartyPig for the things you want and need, you won’t encounter the problems that come along with plastic. Creating goals and contributing to them each month ensures worry-free spending once you’ve met those goals. Save first, buy later. Some people have labeled it “Bank 2.0.” We just think it’s common sense for an upside economy.