|
MAIN
Education
Learning
to Be in Debt - 101?
Credit Cards For High School And College
Students
While
the number of credit card offers students receive may not have
increased, a weak economy may be encouraging more young people
to respond to the offers, according to University of Arkansas
researcher Norma A. Mendoza.
"We are
also seeing credit card marketers targeting younger and younger
populations," said Mendoza, assistant professor of marketing
and logistics in the Sam M. Walton College of Business. "Students
16, 15 or younger are now able to obtain credit cards, for which
their parents may be ultimately responsible."
Accumulation
of credit card debt by college students has become an issue nationwide.
Credit cards are easy to get, and students are acquiring and using
credit cards at a greater rate than ever before. An Internet search
revealed dozens of sites specifically targeting college students
and offering unsecured credit cards. Sponsors ranged from AT&T
and Chase to MasterCard, Visa and Discover, but all encouraged
college students to "start building your credit today."
The problem
is not limited to college students, however. Mendoza explained
that credit card companies are increasingly targeting high school
students. Some researchers have found that patterns of compulsive
buying begin in adolescence.
"It is
becoming more apparent that we must start teaching children about
credit and personal finances at an earlier age. By the time they
get to the college level, they already have attitudes and habits
that are difficult to change," Mendoza said. "We know
that college students are being targeted by credit card companies.
If students are responding differently from other populations,
then we may need to be giving them different information about
the problems associated with credit card debt or approaching the
subject in different ways."
A 2001 study
by Nellie Mae, the leading provider of federal loans for college
students, found that 83 percent of undergraduates have at least
one card and their average balance was $2,327. Students having
balances above $3,000 rose to 21 percent, an increase of 61 percent
since 2000. And college students will double their credit card
debt and triple the number of cards they have between the time
they arrive on campus and graduation.
"With
all of the discussion about credit cards and debt, it would seem
that students would be more aware of the situation," Mendoza
added. "But year after year the issues dont seem to
change. They seem to be living in a suspended reality, a state
of denial."
Mendoza recalls
a day in class when a guest speaker was talking to students about
credit issues. One student confessed to having 20 credit cards,
all with maximum balances. Other students in the class joined
the discussion, expressing relief that they only had 5 or 6 cards
maxed out.
"It is
interesting to see the students reactions when they actually
read the fine print and understand the terms that they agreed
to for the first time," said Mendoza. "Not only do they
not realize how the credit card system works, they dont
understand how it can impact their prospects for employment when
they graduate."
She points
out that background checks, including credit checks are increasingly
common in employment situations, particularly for positions in
banking, information technology or other positions where there
might be a temptation or opportunity to steal money. "Bad
credit or excessive credit card debt is considered a character
flaw," she explained.
Mendoza studies
the debt and savings behavior patterns of college students. She
has conducted numerous studies on credit card debt topics, including
the impact of education about credit on college students
use of credit cards and the relationship between personality and
credit card use. In a recent study conducted with graduate student
Hélène Cherrier, Mendoza found that college students
that plan ahead accumulate more credit card debt than more spontaneous,
live-for-the-moment students.
"Most
people believe that credit card debt is caused by impulse spending
or a lack of self control," Mendoza explained. "But
our research shows that students with a strong future orientation
actually depend more on credit cards than students with an orientation
to the present."
The undergraduate
students sampled in Mendoza's study were given a questionnaire
to acquire demographic and financial information and determine
their temporal orientation, the degree to which they focus on
the present versus the future. Contrary to the argument that a
present orientation leads to credit card overuse, Mendoza found
that those students with a stronger future orientation tended
to use more credit cards and to have higher number of credit cards
with revolving balances.
Mendoza also
expected to find that students who relied more on credit to finance
their current spending would have a high debt-to-income ratio.
This was not the case. Mendoza explained that credit card companies
are luring young consumers by requiring them to pay only the minimum
payment, usually 2 percent of the balance. So even though students
are carrying a large debt burden, they don't perceive it as problematic
because it is not a significant portion of their income.
"Unfortunately,
this approach leads students to carry debt for longer time periods
and to pay more in interest rates," said Mendoza. "Students
may borrow money to be able to achieve consumption levels they
would otherwise be unable to achieve with their current income."
The problem
is that even those college students who understand the nature
of debt have unrealistic expectations about their ability to repay.
Their decisions to spend now may be driven by a future financial
outlook that includes "drastically improved earnings."
It is also
possible that students with a future orientation dont look
far enough into the future to take advantage of it, Mendoza points
out. And students may not have enough information to gauge the
impact of debt and the problems it can cause in the workplace
and family.
An employee
with credit problems may be unable to use a credit card to travel
on business and be forced to explain the situation to an employer.
Or an unsuspecting fiancée may find herself married to,
and responsible for, a huge credit card debt!
Source: University
of Arkansas, Fayetteville
also
see -> How
to Apply To College - Letters, Essay Writing Tips
A
Timeline for Preparing for College | Student
Loan Tips
529
College Saving Plan How To's | Financial
Aid 101
How
to Find Your Dream Job
|