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Villager Leader
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Posts: 5,749
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: virtualcity, ,
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12-02-05, 05:05 AM
Patrick Collinson
Saturday February 12, 2005
The Guardian
A new credit card aimed at millions of low-income families is to charge interest at up to 70% - the highest ever charged by a credit card company.
Marketed under the slogan: "Stay in control of your budgeting", the typical interest rate on the new Vanquis card will be 49.9%, but for some customers the company judge as high risk, it will be 69.5%. MPs and debt campaigners yesterday condemned the rate, which is 15 times the Bank of England base rate and triple the standard rate on other cards. The card also has an annual fee of £19.
Norman Lamb, Liberal Democrat MP for North Norfolk, who recently completed a Treasury select committee investigation into credit cards, called the rate "staggeringly high". He added: "People on a low income tempted by it need to be given a clear financial health warning." Debt on our Doorstep, an umbrella group that includes Oxfam, credit unions and Church Action on Poverty, said: "It's an absolute disgrace that Vanquis should even be suggesting people borrow money on a credit card at that rate."
Vanquis is a subsidiary of Provident Financial, the biggest doorstep lender in the country, and is the subject of an industry-wide investigation by the Competition Commission into the home credit market.
To find customers, Vanquis will trawl through the files of private credit rating agency Experian - it holds data on almost everyone in Britain - to identify individuals rejected by other lenders often because they have run into debt problems in the past.
It expects the typical customer to have an income of half the national average. Provident Financial's executive directors last year earned from £376,000 to £583,000, while the chief executive saw his pension fund rise from £916,000 to £1.3m.
Vanquis managing director Les Stillwell yesterday defended the national launch of the card, which was successfully piloted in part of Scotland last year. He said: "The big problem with credit card lending is not the interest rate but the amount of credit that is granted. We are only looking at that part of the market where we can lend responsibly.
"People will have to have an income of at least £5,000 a year, and will be given a credit limit starting at just £150. If they keep their payments up, the rate will be reviewed, typically falling by 3-4% a year."
But Debt on our Doorstep said it will now increase pressure on the government to amend the consumer credit bill to include a clause allowing the government to impose a maximum interest rate cap.
Calculator
Debt consolidation
Useful links
Visa International
American Express
Mastercard
Consumer Credit Counselling Service
Credit Card Research Group
Equifax UK consumer credit information
Credit industry fraud avoidance scheme
Card search: an interactive guide to the best deal
Credit Action: the National Money Education Charity
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BNV Managing Editor
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Posts: 7,910
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: , , United Kingdom
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12-02-05, 05:34 PM
the government should bann the card
Think outside of the box...Think in spirit
Act as if it were impossible to fail!!!
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Villager
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Posts: 424
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: london, , United Kingdom
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12-02-05, 11:46 PM
Coltrane, I reckon that it's the same company who wrote to my friend quoting that if you borrow £100 you'd have to pay- wait for it.....£165!! Needless to say as soon as i saw it i tore it to shreds because my friend unfortunately does not understand interest rates!! I totally agree with Ladyday these kind of cards are nothing more than scams trying to make the poor even poorer
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