Once again people in poverty have been shown to be vulnerable to unreasonable interest rates, but this time not from the local loan shark. As the pressure group Debt On Our Doorstep launches a campaign to highlight the issue, it has emerged that a new credit card from lender Provident Financial will offer interest rates of nearly 70 per cent. Its target audience? Low income families.
The company's excuse for issuing the card at 20 per cent above its own standard rate is that its intended customers are "high risk", meaning that they may have defaulted on loans in the past. Surely they are aware that high interest rates are not just a symptom of the problem, they are among its causes.
Debt On Our Doorstep has rightly called for a 30 per cent interest rate ceiling to be included in the Consumer Credit Bill. But the government should also give more attention to the social fund. It is often because of the miserliness of the social fund loan system that families are driven to credit sharks in the first place. More social fund claimants should be given grants and, where loans are necessary, they should be more readily available.
David Blunkett says people should work until 'incapacitated'
05 September 2008
News round up: Blunkett - people should work until 'incapacitated'
05 September 2008
Charities slam help for vulnerable families as too little
02 September 2008
News round up: A parent's guide to gang culture
02 September 2008
Youth Justice and the Youth Justice Board
26 August 2008
Substance misuse
15 August 2008
Details of government consultations
21 August 2008
Private Member Bills
25 July 2008
Government Legislation
25 July 2008