Bursting At The Seams: Whoa, Canada

NEW PAYMENTS CANADA RULE ENABLES WIDER USE OF DIGITAL DEBIT PAYMENTS

NEW PAYMENTS CANADA RULE ENABLES WIDER USE OF DIGITAL DEBIT PAYMENTS

The Ability to Repay credit card debt was a component of the CARD Act of 2009, which requires U.S. credit card issuers to do a means test: can the borrower afford to pay back the debt that underwriters qualified him/her for?  According to the text:

Despite strong and steady growth, issuers have done a nice job of complying to the guidelines, as evidenced by numbers on household debt published by the Federal Reserve here. Indicators show that “Household Debt Service Payments as a Percent of Disposable Personal Income” dropped in the U.S. from a peak of 13% to the current rate of 9.l8%  in 2018.

That is good when you think about it.  In a household budget, expenditures should be about 35 or so percent to cover rent or mortgage, < 10% for debt, 25% for taxes, etc, leaving you with perhaps 10% for discretionary items like going out to the moves, soccer fees for kids, and the like.

Problems are brewing for our Canadian brethren, however.

Today’s Global News reports that “Canadian Households (are) now using 14.9% of income for debt payments.

The CBC has similar input:

No one wants to call in the regulators, but perhaps it is time to tone down growth above the 49th parallel?

Overview by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

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