Originally posted by Svalbaard
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Oxymoron?
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Originally posted by Platypus View PostMore than £50k in the last 5 years - interest on credit cards (I'm a heavy borrower)Bored.Comment
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I know a family who've lived on credit card loans for the past twenty years. They do it because it's their only supply of credit, and they want the credit to fund their lifestyle. Of course, if they'd cut back a bit, they'd have more money and a better lifestyle now. That's what comes of living for the now.
I have a mortgage which is currently 66% of the value of the house. Otherwise, no debt.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Originally posted by ace00 View PostThat must be terrible for you - they came round and made you borrow all that money. Awful.Comment
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What I find amazing is the contrast with getting finance for a sensible business plan. Even before the credit crunch I knew many tales from businesspeople of the work involved in convincing a bank manager to lend a business even small sums to buy machinery, vans or pay rent deposits on premises. Several years ago I had to work hard to convince my bank manager to lend me some money to pay for a rather expensive technical course; eventually after reviewing and reworking the business case 3 times he agreed and I paid it back within a year. Now I hear of consumers racking up 150 thousand quid in unsecured debt and it just defies belief. Did nobody think to ask people what they were spending the money on when they borrowed it? I mean, if someone says he wants to spend 150k on a bottling machine to increase the output of his fruit juice company he has to produce a well worked out business case, examined by accountants and then the bottling machine will be security against the loan. A consumer on the other hand can borrow the same amount to spend on posh holidays, flashy shoes, flat screen tellies and booze with no questions asked.And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014Comment
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Originally posted by ace00 View PostThat must be terrible for you - they came round and made you borrow all that money. Awful.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostA consumer on the other hand can borrow the same amount to spend on posh holidays, flashy shoes, flat screen tellies and booze with no questions asked.Comment
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Originally posted by Platypus View PostYou're obviously not divorced. Remind me to make snide comments back when you areDown with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Originally posted by Platypus View PostAnd that's exactly why the banks have no one to blame but themselves.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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