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How debt is hitting home for many consumers as interest rates soar
NBC News · Elijah Nouvelage

Consumers are racking up credit card debt at a pace not seen in decades as inflation continues to pervade the U.S. economy.

In the most recent quarter, which ended in September, consumers’ overall credit card balances increased by 15% — the largest year-on-year increase the New York Federal Reserve has measured in more than 20 years. In aggregate, balances are nearing $1 trillion, not adjusted for inflation, for the first time ever.

And while analysts say many U.S. consumers remain in good financial shape thanks mostly to low unemployment, the debt situation is growing dire.

As the Federal Reserve has continued to lift interest rates to counter sky-high inflation, credit card rates have climbed to the highest levels ever measured. According to Bankrate, the average annual rate for credit cards is 19.2%, the highest since it began measuring the data in 1985.

Bankrate data shows it would take 16 years for someone to pay off the current average credit card balance of $5,474 by making the minimum payments at 19.2%. At that point, they would have shelled out $7,365 in interest alone.

“Which is pretty staggering,” said Ted Rossman, a senior industry analyst for Bankrate.

Yet even as they are paying more to finance their debt, many consumers are still managing to keep their heads above water. At just 2.1%, credit card delinquency rates remain below pre-pandemic levels. The average rejection rate for credit card applications this year has actually declined by 2.4 percentage points, to 18.5%, the New York Fed found. And the quarterly share of total credit card accounts that experienced bank-initiated or borrower-requested credit-line increases remains well above pre-pandemic levels.

"Though delinquency rates are rising, they remain low by historical standards and suggest consumers are managing their finances through the period of increasing prices," the New York Fed concluded.

Lance Dean, a freelance audio engineer based in Los Angeles, recently emerged from a credit card debt situation that he said plagued him for five years. In an interview with NBC News, Dean said he was able to consolidate his debt into one credit line, but that it ultimately went into collections.

Then last Friday, he received a settlement offer from a collections agency to pay off 70% of the debt. He said he took the offer and was able to submit that one-time payment thanks to automatic savings deposits he'd been making.

"I was automating as much as possible," Dean said. "The deposits took place where I could have the opportunity to not be bad about it."


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