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Published - Wednesday, September 24, 2008

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Plastic at 50: How the credit card has changed America


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SAN JOSE, Calif. — They called it the Fresno Drop.

Fifty years ago this month, Bank of America mass-mailed to nearly every home in Fresno, Calif., a small piece of plastic called the BankAmericard. The credit card had arrived, a shiny corkscrew for each recipient to unbottle thousands of dollars in spending money that hadn’t existed before they ripped open those envelopes.
That first taste went right to Fresno’s head. By the second year, cardholders had racked up nearly $60 million in purchases. BankAmericard morphed into the Visa powerhouse. And a half-century later, as America embraced and then exported the concept of buying things with money people didn’t necessarily have, the whole world has gotten tipsy.

And following in the wake of the subprime mortgage mess, the credit card bender could end up being uglier than ever.

“Credit lubricated the economy in ways we couldn’t have conceived of before,” said Bella Berlly, a certified financial planner in Los Altos, Calif. “But as a society we became completely inebriated on it. Being able to just ‘put it on my credit card’ fueled the sense that you could do anything, like a Superman effect.”

The world would never be the same. Diners Club, a so-called charge card that required complete payment each month, had come a few years earlier, the legendary brainchild of a wealthy New York financier caught cashless after a meal at a high-class steak joint.

But the Fresno Drop would pack a much bigger wallop. Dee Hock, the credit card guru who later turned the BankAmericard into the sprawling Visa network of member banks, was really the father of “the electronification of money,” says spokesman Will Valentine at San Francisco-based Visa, whose corporate mantra is to “root out spending by cash and checks.”

Along with its younger siblings like debit and prepaid cards, the revolving credit card — which charges interest and lets customers make partial payments — fundamentally changed not only the way Americans think about money, but America itself.

Santa Clara University finance Professor Meir Statman describes credit as “interwoven into our society.” With consumers no longer tethered to cash on hand or in the bank, the financial realities of our lives — how we save, spend, borrow and budget — went through a sort of time warp.

Armed with plastic, consumers now could charge their way into glittering new lifestyles their parents could only have dreamed of.

“Before credit cards, credit came in small-dollar installment loans and people tended not to use them unless they really needed help,” said Kathleen Keest, a former assistant attorney general in Iowa who now works with the Center for Responsible Lending. “When you had to go to your bank to get a personal note, you really thought about it. But when suddenly it’s a piece of plastic in your pocket, debt almost becomes something that happens without thinking about it.”

The sea change has been extraordinary. Revolving debt, most of it from credit cards, stood at $1.5 billion in 1968, according to the Federal Reserve. This summer, it reached $969.9 billion.

Those 60,000 cards dropped into Fresno 50 years ago have mushroomed to 3.67 billion payment cards today, with more than two-thirds of them in circulation abroad.

It’s a great big plastic world out there. Norm Magnuson with the Washington, D.C.-based Consumer Data Industry Association recalls buying a “TV on credit in the ’60s, and my father about had a heart attack. Today you stand in line at Starbucks and people use credit to buy a $4 cup of coffee.”

Magnuson says credit “gives you the opportunity to not only have a better standard of living, but you’re also putting more money into the economy and it’s being recirculated. Since two-thirds of our economy is based on consumer spending, the more consumers purchase, the better off the economy.”

Companies like Visa and MasterCard, which maintain networks of financial institutions lending the money and collecting fees every time a card is used, have become spectacularly wealthy through this easy access to credit. Visa’s recent initial public offering was the largest in U.S. history, while MasterCard’s stock has soared nearly 500 percent since it went public two years ago, their markets overseas growing like wildfire.

But while most cardholders pay off their debt, there remains a very dark side to the credit card, “a deceptively simple device that has the capability of destroying you,” says Adam Levin, co-founder of San Francisco-based credit.com.

Critical of the card issuers’ heavy fees and aggressive marketing tactics, especially toward finance-naive student and low-income communities, Levin says “people have been bludgeoned” by credit card offers, often going to consumers already struggling with debt. “It’s like taking a vampire and putting him in the middle of a blood bank.”
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Big Spender wrote on Sep 25, 2008 1:47 AM:

" Thanks, mytwocents, but, no, this is not one of the links I referred to.

The local section (9-23) threads/blogs/whatever went poof when the stories were deleted, then a day later the stories reappeared minus about a hundred user posts. "

Mack wrote on Sep 24, 2008 1:19 PM:

" We are witnessing the fall of Capitalism and sloppy credit is to blame. "

nana3 wrote on Sep 24, 2008 9:49 AM:

" Remember when you really wanted something, an outfit maybe, and you didn't have the money for it? You would put it on lay away. I used to do my Christmas shopping very early and put it on lay away, which allowed me to get what my kids wanted and I could pay in installments. There was no charge for layaway. I don't think it exists anymore. The credit card has changed the USA, it can be a vry ugly thing if you fall behind one month, for what ever reason, the late fees and penalties are bad enough but they also raise the interest rate. In WI there is no cap on the rate, I have seen cards with a 25% rate. "

mytwocents wrote on Sep 24, 2008 8:38 AM:

" BS
Is this the UW-L story you are looking for.

http://www.lacrossetribune.com/articles/2008/09/21/opinion/editorial/00mial21.txt

You can also search "Most Commented" to find popular article comments. "

Big Spender wrote on Sep 24, 2008 8:25 AM:

" notme is right: the Tribune memory-hole phenomenon seems to occur at suspicious times; when the topic was the UW-L Republican student Christian cross and the Winona flag-desecration story, there was much heated debate, then all the posts mysteriously went poof--I'll bet someone phoned Mial or his bosses at Lee Enterprises!

In honor of kayo'd's "ha ha ha," here is a free movie:

Michael Moore's Slacker Uprising

(Yours truly was at the 2004 Madison event, somewhere in the dark getting wind chill off Lake Mendota!)

http://slackeruprising.com/download/ "

kayoz wrote on Sep 24, 2008 8:06 AM:

" HA HA HA "

notme wrote on Sep 24, 2008 7:28 AM:

" ALL the 9-23 Articles, and the debate that went with them GONE FOR EVER.

My bet is the stories will be back up later today, as BS pointed out WITHOUT THE DEBATE.

The Tribune Editors (LEE Enterprises) do this when they get too much debate on the wrong stories, or the wrong kind of debate. They will claim it was some sort of error, but it is really CENSORSHIP, as they (Tribune) MUST control the thought process and/or the information.

Free exchange of ideas is DEAD in this town because it is controlled by a media monopoly.

God forbid somebody might read the blog and actually LEARN something. "

blogger wrote on Sep 24, 2008 5:59 AM:

" Plastic at 50: How the credit card has changed America --> yeah, Wall Street meltdown and national debt explosion. "

Big Spender wrote on Sep 24, 2008 4:53 AM:

" Timber!!! Our house of credit cards collapses! Except for Wall Street: they mess up, now they get a trillion in cash borrowed under your name. They're forging your name as cosigner right this very minute.

This mess is part of an economic 'perfect storm' so make sure you've got plenty of canned goods, some gold, and firewood for the winter!

"FBI investigates four Wall Street firms over sub-prime meltdown"

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/sep/24/wallstreet.freddiemacandfanniemae "


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