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ARCHIVES ::
NOVEMBER 2002 :: COVER STORY
Forever
Indebted
Consumer
Borrowing Reaches
Record Levels, and Even
The Wealthy Are Struggling
By
JON HILSENRATH AND MICHELLE HIGGINS
Staff Reporters of The Wall Street Journal
George
Keith was living the good life. Now, he’s paying the price.
During
the boom years, he took his wife and three children to Europe and
put a new pool with a spa in his backyard.
Then
a year ago, he lost his job as a technology consultant. Now, he has
nearly $600,000 in debt—a combination of student loans for his
kids in college, mortgage loans, bank credit lines, and borrowings
against his retirement plan.

Mr.
Keith recently got a lower-paying job with a pharmaceutical company.
Despite a combined income of $185,000, he and his wife are having to
cut back to meet their payments.
Worries
have been mounting for a while about auto repossessions, personal
bankruptcies and mortgage foreclosures; each is at or near its
highest level in decades. Now, after a mortgage-refinancing boom and
a slew of 0%-financing offers, there’s evidence that debt levels
are becoming an issue for people at all levels of the income
spectrum. For many families like the Keiths, just making monthly
payments is starting to define their lifestyles.
Debt
= Income
Overall
household debt has exploded to more than 100% of disposable income
(income after taxes), which is the highest percentage on record. In
other words, the average household earns in one year, after taxes,
about what it owes in overall long-term debt.
But
wealthy families are piling on debt the fastest, largely because of
increased borrowing against the value of their homes. Debt for the
top-fifth of U.S. households hit 120% of disposable income in the
first quarter, up from 100% in 1995, according to Federal Reserve
Board calculations. The debt burden for the bottom four-fifths of
households also grew, but at a more modest rate. It rose to 80% of
disposable income this year, from 70% in 1995, according to the
Federal Reserve.
Robert
Beitman, an ophthalmologist in West Bloomfield, Mich., says hundreds
of his patients have taken advantage of 0% financing for laser
vision surgery since he began offering it last fall. “You would
think that everybody who took this option would have a cut-off
sweatshirt and a car with no muffler,” he says. “That isn’t
the case. [People] leave in Mercedeses and BMWs.”
The
news isn’t all bleak. Nationwide, incomes are rising and interest
rates are low, meaning many households, especially the wealthiest,
are able to manage their higher debt loads. In addition, the Federal
Reserve released a report last month hinting that the debt binge
might finally be slowing a bit. The Fed said that consumer borrowing
rose at an annual rate of 2.9% in August, a sharp slowdown from the
7% rate in July.
In
addition, because of low interest rates, debt payments as a
percentage of disposable income are at a manageable 14%. That’s at
the high end of the past 20 years, but not off the charts. “As
long as interest rates remain low, this level of debt is on the
whole manageable to people,” says economist David Wyss.
Even
so, lenders are starting to play hardball with borrowers who are
heavily in debt. Lisa Orman of Madison, Wis., has about $50,000 in
debt on five different credit cards from her public-relations
business. Even though she says she is rarely late with payments, she
receives about four or five calls a week from credit-card companies
seeking payment. “They’ve gotten more and more relentless and
persistent,” she says.
At
Cambridge Credit Counseling in Springfield, Mass., call volumes have
doubled from a year ago, to about 40,000 per day from 20,000.
Manager Chris Viale says the company is increasingly getting calls
from higher-income people looking for help in managing heavy debt
loads. (Related
article)
Consumer
credit, of course, has defined American culture for centuries.
“The Pilgrims came over on an installment plan,” says Lendol
Calder, an economic historian at Augustana College, adding that many
took years to pay for their passage. Centuries later, in 1949, at
the beginning of the long postwar economic boom, a Business Week
magazine headline asked, “Is the Country Swamped With Debt?”
This
time around, economists say three factors will determine whether
today’s debt boom turns into a bust: interest rates, incomes and
home prices.
Economists
worry that interest rates could rise, making it harder for borrowers
to repay adjustable-rate loans.
One
Big Hit
But
the outlook for incomes is just as important. Most people don’t
have debt problems because they borrow too much. Instead, they
experience trouble when they suffer a hit to their income that makes
it harder to make regular payments.
Now
the sluggish job market is taking its toll on borrowers like Don
Rodriguez. Last year, he was making six figures as a marketing
consultant with Accenture. He lost his job, and now, to pay his
mortgage, he is liquidating his retirement investments. To keep
payments down on roughly $30,000 in credit-card debt, he is
switching balances to low-rate offers every chance he gets.
“We’ll deal with the consequences later,” he says.
Home
prices are important because many households have been tapping into
the value of their homes by taking out home-equity loans or
refinancing their mortgages at lower interest rates and taking cash
out in the process. Because the values of their homes are rising,
they have been able to take cash out without putting a serious dent
in their overall wealth.
But
even with low rates, many homeowners are being squeezed by monster
mortgages and heavy spending. Two-and-a-half years ago, Ana and Adam
Dierkhising of San Francisco bought a $1.2 million home, and they
are putting another $700,000 into expanding it. Now, their payments
from the two loans total $4,500 a month. Since the work on their new
home isn’t finished, the Dierkhisings are paying $4,000 a month in
rent for the home they just sold. On top of all that, the family
pays another $7,500 a month on a second home in Massachusetts that
Ms. Dierkhising owns with her brother.
Mr.
Dierkhising makes a six-figure salary as a real-estate agent, but
his business has been hurt by the slowing market. Recently, the
couple stopped going out to eat, laid off their housekeeper and
signed their kids up for longer preschool hours to save money on
babysitting. Ms. Dierkhising is trying to sell the Massachusetts
home. She says, “Before we never thought about the money.”
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Consumer debt has reached record levels, and
is rising fastest among wealthy people
>
Incomes are rising and interest rates are
low, so for the most part, these debt levels are
manageable
>
The outlook for interest rates, incomes and home
values could determine whether the credit boom leads
to a bust |
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