Credit Card Debt Puzzle: Liquid Assets to Pay Bills

C. Greene, J. Stavins
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

: Using transaction data from a US consumer payments diary, we revisit the credit card debt puzzle—a scenario in which consumers revolve credit card debt while also keeping liquid assets as bank account deposits. This scenario is very common: 42 percent of consumers in our sample were borrower-savers in 2019 (those who carry $100 or more in credit card debt and $100 or more in liquid assets). We explain the puzzle by showing that consumers need their liquid assets to pay monthly bills and other necessary expenses, including mortgage or rent. More than 80 percent of bills by value were paid out of bank accounts and could not be charged to credit cards, so bank account balances were needed to cover those basic expenses. On average, borrower-savers’ credit card debt exceeded their liquid assets. The average borrower-saver carried almost $6,400 in unpaid credit card debt and had $5,400 in liquid assets, including checking and savings accounts, cash, and general-purpose prepaid cards. Only 40 percent of borrower-savers had liquid assets greater than their unpaid credit card balance. In addition, borrower-savers’ monthly expenses (bills and purchases) averaged 77 percent of their liquid assets, not leaving enough to repay their credit card debt. On average, the value of their liquid assets could cover only about 60 percent of their unpaid debt plus monthly bills. In almost every category of assets or debts, both housing and non-housing related, borrower-savers were significantly worse off financially than savers. Thus, the differences between borrower-savers and savers are much broader than just their credit card debt and bank account balances; they extend to mortgage debt and home equity. Even when we control for income and demographics in a regression, we find that carrying a mortgage or other debt (such as auto or educational loans) is associated with a higher probability of revolving on a credit card, suggesting that various types of household debt are complements rather than substitutes. During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, consumers’ unpaid credit card debt decreased and their liquid assets increased, so the fraction of borrower-savers dropped to 35 percent of the sample. variable instead of the probability of being a bor-sav yields similar estimated coefficients. The results are available from
信用卡债务难题:支付账单的流动资产
使用来自美国消费者支付日记的交易数据,我们重新审视信用卡债务难题——在这种情况下,消费者既要偿还信用卡债务,又要将流动资产作为银行账户存款。这种情况非常普遍:2019年,我们样本中42%的消费者是借款人储蓄者(那些持有100美元或更多信用卡债务和100美元或更多流动资产的人)。我们通过展示消费者需要他们的流动资产来支付每月账单和其他必要开支来解释这个谜题,包括抵押贷款或租金。按价值计算,超过80%的账单是由银行账户支付的,不能用信用卡支付,因此需要银行账户余额来支付这些基本费用。平均而言,借款人储蓄者的信用卡债务超过了他们的流动资产。平均每个借款人-储蓄者都有近6400美元的未付信用卡债务,还有5400美元的流动资产,包括支票和储蓄账户、现金和通用预付卡。只有40%的借贷储蓄者的流动资产大于他们未付的信用卡余额。此外,借款人储蓄者每月的开支(账单和购买)平均占他们流动资产的77%,没有足够的钱来偿还他们的信用卡债务。平均而言,他们的流动资产的价值只能支付他们未偿债务加上每月账单的60%左右。在几乎所有类别的资产或债务中,包括住房和非住房相关的,借款人储蓄者的财务状况明显比储蓄者差。因此,借款人储蓄者和储蓄者之间的差异远不止他们的信用卡债务和银行账户余额;它们延伸到抵押贷款债务和房屋净值。即使我们在回归中控制了收入和人口统计数据,我们也发现,持有抵押贷款或其他债务(如汽车或教育贷款)与更高的信用卡循环可能性相关,这表明各种类型的家庭债务是互补的,而不是替代的。在2020年2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,消费者的未付信用卡债务减少,流动资产增加,因此借款人储蓄者的比例下降到样本的35%。变量,而不是成为无变量的概率,会产生类似的估计系数。结果可从
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