consumers warned no end in sight to credit crisis by Finance News Bulletin

Published: 11/12/07

Borrowing is becoming more luxurious as the wider economic turmoil afflicting global monetary markets continues to gather paceThat's according to Chris Tapp, director of debt management charity praise Action, who is caution that UK consumers need to respond to the altering financial landscape by moderating their spendingMr Tapp noted that the praise crisis is being compounded by interest rates which have risen five era in the past 18 months, so while savers have enjoyed bigger returns conversely borrowers are judgment themselves saddled by increasingly unmanageable repaymentsHe urged consumers to time in power in their expenditure over the Christmas period and to draw up manageable budgets for the coming months and existence of economic uncertainty

"About 20 per cent [of populace are still paying off their borrowing from Christmas six months afterward and about one in ten are still paying it off the Christmas after," Mr Tapp noted "So people really need to believe through how they are going to have enough money Christmas"The Monetary Policy Committee last week voted to grasp interest rates at their current level of 575 per cent, superseding pleas from mortgage lenders and praise groups to alleviate the strain of the ongoing credit crunch by lowering the base rate

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