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History of Credit Cards
A History and Background of Credit Cards
by: Joseph Kenny
Credit cards work to make tremendous revenues to credit card companies, banks
and retail sales. They do not however work the way they used to work for the
customers that temporarily possess them. Many years ago when credit cards were
invented and I was a young boy they were a means to finance household items
considered necessary. These were things like washing machines and clothes
dryers. Credit cards today have such a high interest that they are no longer
attractive to purchase such items. Credit cards are primarily now seem to be
used to hide and avoid indebtedness.
There is nothing really good about debt. Americans have been convinced by retail
salesmen and the banks that to have good credit one must have a solid credit
history through credit cards or credit accounts. A solid history means more than
the fact that you have consistently made payments on time without failure. The
credit card companies and the banks evaluate your spending tends, the debt load
over time, your savings history, checking deposit history and actual check
spending history. This personal information is felt by these institutions to be
proprietary, belonging to the institution because of their unique methods of
collection, rather than belonging to the individual who creates this activity.
A credit card, if it is the only credit card you possess, could start improving
a portion of bad debt only if you liquidate your current debt in a steady,
reliable manner. This will only show a history of reliable payment. As I have
already stated banks and credit card companies are not interested only in your
reliability, they want the "juice" off of the advanced credit you have obtained.
This means they only want you if they can get their interest in a regular and
steady manner. This is not the same as pay your debt regularly until it
vanishes. They want you to remain indebted permanently but repaying them in a
timely manner.
If you are debt free you may not be judged to be a good credit risk. This is the
state that underage children and young adults find themselves whenever they
attempt to secure a credit card. Simply stated, good credit doesn't mean what it
did just fourteen years ago. The protections afforded the consumer since the
Depression of 1929 no longer exist. The Financial Laws passed through Congress
in 1992 allowed banks, insurance companies,especially health insurance companies
investment firms to handle banking, insurance and investment operations. Laws
passed after 1929 had prevented banks from insurance and direct stock exchange
trading, likewise insurance companies could not pursue banking operations or
stock exchange nor could stock exchange companies pursue insurance or banking
operations. This freedom was granted without the subsequent protections of the
consumer included in these new laws. There currently exists no single body of
consumer law. The private citizen must fight the triumvirate of bank,insurance
and stock exchange through the court system.
About The Author
Joseph Kenny writes for the Card Guide, a site where visitors can interest free
balance transfers and also read the information on the credit card guide. Visit
today: http://www.cardguide.co.uk
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