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FOOL SCHOOL
As all Fools know, the only way to properly manage your credit card is to pay it off in full each month. In fact, cards can even be a very good thing. If you use them sensibly, you can have the advantage of Free Money for as much as six weeks, and you don't pay a soul for the privilege!
But, it's very easy to get 'conned' by special offers such as low interest rates for six months, or the lack of an annual fee, only to find that, sooner or later, the former shoots up and the latter puts in an unexpected appearance. Except you didn't realise it because you didn't read the small print when you first signed up, nor did you read the leaflet that arrived with your latest credit card bill announcing such changes. It went straight into the bin, didn't it?
Credit card companies would say that's your problem, of course. And, in theory, it is. But there's nothing to stop them heading your bill with "INCIDENTALLY, WE'VE NOW DOUBLED YOUR INTEREST RATE" or "SURPRISE! SURPRISE! ANNUAL CHARGES NOW APPLICABLE".
Hmmm! I wonder why they don't do that?
No surprises there -– it's because their entire reason for existence is to make money out of you. And they will if you let them.
The fact is, when you use your credit or store card you're borrowing money –- usually at a rather top-heavy rate of interest (Debenhams charge nearly 30% and Barclaycard nearly 20%!). But there's a tendency for people not to think about it in those terms. It's far too easy to see your £1,000 credit limit as free spending money. No, No, No! It isn't!
It was probably the profligate use of credit cards that got you into trouble in the first place but there are ways of using them to actually sort out your debt problems -- if you're sensible about it! After all, if you've got debts, they might as well be cheap ones!
Taking Control Of Your Cards
Many credit card companies, in a bid to get your custom, are offering a zero rate of interest if you transfer your debts from other cards. The zero rate usually lasts for between six and nine months, meaning you can save a significant amount of interest if you have a sizable outstanding balance.
There are also companies offering a cash-back option if you transfer your debts, and these can also be useful as a means of reducing your borrowings. In fact, some of our Fools on the Credit Card Discussion Board are using the cash-back cards as a means of acquiring Free Money even if they're not in debt! They're cheerfully playing the system and having a good time doing it! It's amazing how much pleasure one can get from playing the financial institutions at their own game.
It is, of course, inadvisable to take this route if you're usually at the bottom of the class when it comes to handling money -- but it's certainly sensible to use what's on offer to your advantage. Quite simply, if you've borrowed money on a high-interest credit card, then transfer the debt to a low-interest card so that it costs you less to pay it off.
It goes without saying that you MUST pay it off! Getting yet another credit card doesn't give you a licence to carry on spending money! Remember that you are the Master and money is your Servant. So make sure you stay in control and use the system to get yourself free of your debts.
If you're worried that your new card will prove too much in the way of temptation then try the following course of action:
Take one small plastic container with lid. Fill it with water. Float one single credit card -- the one that charges the lowest interest rate, of course -- on the water. Sink it with a small but carefully selected stone from the garden and put the lid on. Then stick it in the freezer and leave it to sulk among the fish fingers and oven ready chips.
It'll be there if you really, really need it. And, if the day comes when you truly think there's no other alternative, this method will give you some time to contemplate whether you absolutely have to use it -- because you'll have to wait while it defrosts! (No cheating -- the microwave will nuke the magnetic strip!)
As for the rest of your cards -- the high-interest ones that you've just abandoned because you are NEVER going to use them again, are you? -- just get the scissors out and cut them up!
Or you could, as financial guru, Alvin Hall, recommends, set fire to them in the back garden while playing 'Burn, Baby, Burn' very loudly on the stereo. Have a bit of a boogie while you're at it.
Either course of action has two benefits: it removes the temptation to spend, and it means you'll have more room in your wallet for the real money that will come your way once you've cleared your debts!
Now, isn't that a cheery thought?
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