She applied for and got a credit card with a limit of $500 and within a year or so she excitedly told me the bank had sent her an unsolicited letter increasing her amount to $10,000.I was horrified, but fathers know nothing to teenage daughters, and I sneaked into her room and watched the balance grow to $10,000 over a couple of years. My father passed away and I gave my children $10,000 each and she paid off the bank.
A friend of mine was much smarter. His daughter went to university, got the credit card with a $500 limit, and the bank then increased this to $10,000. She had no job.She hit the limit of $10,000 and the bank demanded repayment. My friend was alerted to his daughter's plight and he told the bank to "bankrupt her, and she will be out of bankruptcy in a couple of years, and a good lesson to both of you".
Maybe the parents should have taught their children about how money in the real world works...
However, I do think there should be a personal finance class taught in high school, which is compulsory. Covering topics like Income tax, interest, personal loans, credit cards, mortgages, budgeting etc.
What kind of monkeys run banks these days?
My credit card limit is $500. The bank sent me the letter saying they would increase the limit to $10,000 but I went to the bank and told them "No". In fact, I didnt even want a credit card but it came free with the ANZ student pack thing that they were promoting at the time.Recently I got a letter saying I can get a personal loan for anywhere from $1000 - $100,000.What kind of monkeys run banks these days?
Quote from Tiwaking!: August 24, 2015, 07:05:24 pmMy credit card limit is $500. The bank sent me the letter saying they would increase the limit to $10,000 but I went to the bank and told them "No". In fact, I didnt even want a credit card but it came free with the ANZ student pack thing that they were promoting at the time.Recently I got a letter saying I can get a personal loan for anywhere from $1000 - $100,000.What kind of monkeys run banks these days?What's wrong with that? They're a bank, credit cards and loans are the products they sell.Would you be offended if you walked into a shoe store, and someone tried to sell you a pair of shoes?
You never know when you may need some quick bridging finance, and a platinum card gives you good reputation in all sorts of situations.
My credit card limit is $500. The bank sent me the letter saying they would increase the limit to $10,000 but I went to the bank and told them "No". In fact, I didnt even want a credit card but it came free with the ANZ student pack thing that they were promoting at the time.
Nothing wrong with having a high limit, just don't use it, I've always accepted any increase.You never know when you may need some quick bridging finance, and a platinum card gives you good reputation in all sorts of situations.
Quote from Tiwaking!: August 24, 2015, 07:05:24 pmRecently I got a letter saying I can get a personal loan for anywhere from $1000 - $100,000.What kind of monkeys run banks these days?What's wrong with that? They're a bank, credit cards and loans are the products they sell.Would you be offended if you walked into a shoe store, and someone tried to sell you a pair of shoes?
Recently I got a letter saying I can get a personal loan for anywhere from $1000 - $100,000.What kind of monkeys run banks these days?
But if you need the bank to increase the limit then you can go and ask them. Its not hard. The problem I have is that it appears the banks have a franchise wide policy of automatically increasing the limit regardless of who owns the credit card.
home economics doesn't properly teach healthy eating habits,
I would love schools to implement a 'life skills' curriculum. Basic stuff like car maintenance, taxes, budgeting, shit even things like nutrition; home economics doesn't properly teach healthy eating habits, handing out a stupid photocopied worksheet of an outdated food pyramid does not teach an understanding of nutrition.