Payday loans are big
news. July's announcement by the Archbishop of Canterbury that he
wanted to 'put them out of business' by supporting a network of
credit unions follows prolonged scrutiny from politicians and
campaigning groups. Walthamstow MP Stella Creasy, in particular, has
been prominent in opposing the high-interest, short-term, lenders she
calls 'legal loan sharks', and has pressed for tighter regulation of
the industry.
Socialists should care
about payday loans. Not only do they have a severe and negative
impact on some of the most financially vulnerable people in society;
the growth of the industry also reveals a lot about contemporary
British capitalism.
Supplied by firms such
as Wonga and Money Shop, and most often taken out for
very short periods ('until payday'), payday loans are unsecured and
have extremely high interest rates. Some loans with Wonga have
an APR of 4500%, and Which? calculate the average cost of
payday loans as being £25 for every £100 borrowed per. month.
Exploitative in themselves, these rates can trap people in debt and
hardship if the loans are not paid off quickly – and 70% of those
who use payday lenders have rolled their loan over at least once.
Payday loans are used
to pay for the necessities of life. 78% of loans are used to pay for
basics: food, household bills, or housing payments. Very often payday
loans are used as overdraft substitutes by people denied credit by
banks. People do not put themselves in this situation lightly, in
spite of the patronising talk of 'financial illiteracy' from some
charities. The context within which this dependence on expensive
credit has come about is one of low wages, reduced benefits, and
expensive housing.
Everybody needs to
feed, clothe, and house themselves and their dependants. If wages,
supplemented by in-work benefits, don't provide the means to do this,
people will rely on credit. Last month the TUC reported that UK real
wages had been falling for 40 months. Combined with high
underemployment – around 10% of UK workers according to the UK
Labour Force Survey – and the financial insecurity created by
short-term and zero-hours contracts, the result is a situation ripe
for exploitation by lenders. Add to this the Coalition's sustained
attack on in-work benefits, and the sky high cost of housing,
especially in London, and it is fair to describe the UK as suffering
from a crisis of working-class income.
To be addressed
properly this crisis needs tackling at the roots. Credit unions,
praiseworthy in themselves, are not a panacea, and the suggestion
that they are in a position to force payday lenders out of business
is naïve in the extreme. Still less is an emphasis on 'financial
literacy' the way forward. There is, of course, nothing wrong with
helping people manage their money, and some people from all
backgrounds have problems with personal finances. However, the
suggestion that there is a systematic problem with lower income
peoples' money management is simply a moralising attempt to blame
people for their own poverty.
Regulation of payday
lenders should not be ruled out by the Left. We do, though, need to
be careful. Horrific though this is, people depend here-and-now on
these loans to feed themselves. We have to be very careful that we
don't give our backing to piecemeal reforms which deny them even this
opportunity.
The real solution is to
address the crisis of income which allows payday lenders to flourish.
We need real action on wages; we should support the Living Wage for
all workers, and give our backing to struggles for higher wages in
our workplaces and localities. We should push for the reversal of the
Government's attack on the welfare state, and for the extension of
more generous benefits, guaranteeing everyone a decent level of
income. We should act on housing: arguing for rent controls, the
building of council houses, and measures to stop the escalation of
house prices. And, above all, we should call into question the
capitalist system which allows the parasites of Wonga to grow
fat on the desperation of others.
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