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e blast NIPSA Youth E-zine
January 2013
Payday Loans
What’s the problem?
Kris Bailie (NIPSA Youth) Nestled deep within the beast that is rising unemployment, rising living costs, house repossession, fuel poverty, frozen wages, malnutrition and ill health lies a dark, relentless and powerful heart: payday loans. Long-term unemployment among young people has almost doubled since 2008.1 As we head towards becoming the poorest youth for generations, we find ourselves financially desperate, with a banking industry that has cut us off from credit like an engorged suckling. Cue an alternative saviour targeting the financially starved young with offers of “help”: payday loans companies. The most high profile of such companies is Wonga. Wonga states that its client base is made up of “the ‘Facebook generation’ – the couple whose boiler breaks at 7pm, or the teenager who has to find money for a Glastonbury ticket”.2 These companies host shiny, catchy advertisements and market their loans as being able to casually and transparently help you with
your mortgage or utility bills to gently get you by until payday. Countless foreign and home-grown payday loans companies currently operate in the sector. However, they distort this great financial feast by offering people on below-average salaries small loans of around £400 over 30 days, with anything up to a monstrous 5,000% interest. Although consumer credit regulation says that no unsecured loan should exceed £25,000, there is no control on how much interest a lender can charge.
How do we know payday loans are uncontrollable? ●● The UK lending and pawnbroking industry, worth £100 million in 2004, is now said to be worth between £2 billion and £4 billion ●● Figures 3 for people calling the National Debt Helpline have increased tenfold in the past two years ●●
The majority of people4 who took out a payday loan have regretted the decision afterwards because they are so damaging to a person’s long-term finances
●● Moneyexpert.com calculated that if you borrowed just £100 from Wonga at its APR, after seven years you would owe more than the US national debt (scroll down) Ref A4_0038