There is nothing wrong with credit cards, it's the people who don't know how to use them that is the problem. Most people's problems are due to people spending money they didn't have on things they didn't need.
I don't have a credit card because I know how to live well within my means.
Only if you don't stick to the terms and conditions.I was just saying it sounds like a lot of hassle to have one with MBNA
I would argue that you should have a credit card if you know how to live within your means.
Yes,im in the wrong for being in arrears,But thats the situation that has happened due to work etc,But at the end of the Day this company are very one-track.Sure as some posters are pointing out its justbecause i didnt stick to the T&C's But thats wasnt by choice,of course i want too but its just the Bad situation that has happened to me.
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I couldn't agree more.Brendan said:The MBNA approach to people in arrears is disproportionate and amounts to bullying. When you take out your card, you don't know if you will be in arrears or not. So you should simply avoid MBNA.
I couldn't agree more.
Not that I am aware of.Are MBNA not subjected to some code of practice in relation to how they deal with customers?
Firstly my point about credit cards was not directed at you as I do not know why you are in arrears, you have not told us. But I am amazed at this
"Just because I didn't stick to the terms and conditions".
You make it sound like terms and conditions are irrelevant and that you being in arrears has nothing to do with you. Maybe I missed something?
Gembem, what is wrong with a credit card? Having a credit card does not mean one does not live within one's means?
All financial services suppliers are obliged to comply with the Consumer Protection Code. So you should read this and make a complaint to the Financial Regulator if you feel that there is systematic non compliance. ( Unlikely that they will do anything)
It would be very easy to prove they were calling a person 20 times a day.The code mentions nothing about harrassment or bullying and how would you prove that in any case.
And what would be the basis of your arguement? I save money every week so if I want to buy something I take it out of my savings rather than relying on a credit card.
Convenience most obviously. Say I fancy spending €3000 on a TV - It's too much for LASER, too much to withdraw & walk around with & I don't have a cheque book. Besides, you're really limiting your online purchasing ability by not having a Credit Card; VISA Debit isn't accepted everywhere.
It is accepted wherever Visa is accepted.VISA Debit isn't accepted everywhere.
Yes you can, either by Laser or Visa Debit.I don't think you can book flights without a credit card either.
It is accepted wherever Visa is accepted.
The Cullens, it turns out, belong to Mosaic's Group B 11: "Happy Families: Families Making Good." These are "older people on middle incomes ... not high fliers up career ladders of large conglomerates". Neighbourhoods like this are "hardly centres of intellectual or aesthetic style". Happy Families are "likely to be interested in adverts for financial products". "This is a culture," concludes Mosaic, "that is keen to take advantage of easy credit."
I later discover that a fledgling incarnation of Mosaic called Acorn, which is also used by some credit card companies, says of Richard Cullen's postcode: "The interest in current affairs is low. They are educated to a low degree." (Acorn was invented by the creator of Mosaic, but it is owned and operated by a company called CACI, not by Experian).
"The dynamism," he says. "The innovation." I've never heard these words uttered with such sadness. "I don't think anyone would have foreseen how innovative and aggressive and competitive the financial services would become in their techniques," he says. "The whole lot of them are to blame." He pauses. "I'm not advocating a return to the status quo. But the pendulum has swung much too far."
Now Lord Griffiths has just published a new report - What Price Credit? - which has this somewhat apocalyptic conclusion: "The sheer scale of consumer debt [£1 trillion] has made millions of households extremely vulnerable to shocks to the economy ... such as oil price rises, acts of terrorism and wars ... Debt is a time-bomb for the 15 million people who struggle with repayments."
I tell Lord Griffiths about Richard Cullen's suicide, and he sighs. "I had a friend," he replies. "A clergyman. I met him for dinner one night. He was suffering from cancer. He broke down over dinner and confessed to me that he had 32 credit cards. He said he was using each card to pay off the charges on the others. He told me about the shame he felt. You could just sense the emotional pressure. I'm no doctor ... " Lord Griffiths pauses, then says, "He died soon afterwards."
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