SEO

Real Estate

Internet Marketing


 Powered by Max Banner Ads 
    You are here: Home > Articles > A problem called ‘Credit Card Debt‘

Aug

27

A problem called ‘Credit Card Debt‘

Posted By: Ramon Rivas on August 27, 2009 at 9:03 am


 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

A problem called ‘Credit Card Debt‘

Credit cards are no more a luxury, they are almost a necessity. So, you would imagine a lot of people going for credit cards. In fact, a lot of people posses more than one credit cards. So, the credit card industry is growing by leaps and bounds. However, the credit card industry and credit card holders are posed with a big problem called ‘Credit Card Debt’. In order to understand what ‘credit card debt’ actually means, we need to understand the workflow associated with the use of credit cards as such.

Credit cards, as the name suggests, are cards on which you can get credit i.e. make borrowings (your credit card debt). Your credit card is a representative of the credit account that you hold with the credit card supplier. Whatever payments you make using your credit card are actually your borrowings that contribute towards your credit card debt. Your total credit card debt is the total amount you owe credit card supplier. You must settle your credit card debt on a monthly basis. So, you receive a monthly statement or your credit card bill which shows your total credit card debt. You must pay off your credit card debt by the payment due date failing which you will incur late fee and interest charges. However, you have the option of making a partial (minimum) payment too, in which case you don’t incur late fee but just the interest charges on your credit card debt. If you don’t pay off your credit card debt in full, the interest charges too get added to it. So your credit card debt keeps on increasing, more so because the interest rates on credit card debt are generally higher than the interest rates on other kind of loans/borrowings. Further, the interest charges add on to your credit card debt each month to form the new balance or the new credit card debt amount. If you continue making partial payments (or no payments) the interest charges are calculated afresh on the new credit card debt. So you end up paying interest on the last month’s interest too. Thus your credit card debt accumulates rapidly and soon you find that what was once a relatively small credit card debt has ballooned into a big amount which you find almost impossible to pay. Moreover, if you don’t still control your spending habits, your credit card debt rises even faster. This is how the vicious circle of credit card debt works.

This article was Sponsored by Xima USA

 

FREE Real Estate Tips

Enter your Name and Email Address to Receive FREE Real Estate Tips and How To Videos

Name *
Email *
* Name and Email Address are Required

Privacy Notice: We Respect Your Privacy And Hate SPAM. Your Information Will Never Be Sold Or Shared Anyone. You can Unsubscribe at any time.

Similar Articles:

»crosslinked«

    Filed Under: Articles Tagged with , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Recommend Related Products
Digg it       Save to Del.icio.us       Subscribe to My RSS feed      
Add this to:

 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Leave a Reply

*

Security Code:




RSS Feed RSS Feed RSS Feed

Ads

FREE Real Estate Tips

Advertising


 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Past Articles

Subscribe Here

Advertising

Advertising

Categories: