Many parents will be sending their kids off to college in the coming weeks, and the issue of credit cards always comes up. Parents don’t want their kids to be high and dry if they need an emergency car repair or have a medical issue. For many college freshman, it is a rite of passage to apply for their first credit card and swipe the card for the first time. It makes them feel like a responsible adult, because they are using credit. This is a load of garbage, and it’s exactly what credit card companies want young people to think. Credit card companies have done a superb job at making credit cards feel like a status symbol. That’s why they use words like “gold” and “platinum”. Blake Thompson, the sound engineer for the Dave Ramsey radio show, posted this on Twitter and Facebook today: 64% of college students have credit cards, half do not know the annual percentage (APR) of the credit card they use most, and 42% of freshmen are credit card dependent. – Center of Economics in Washington 64% of college students have credit cards, and 100% of them can’t afford to pay them off! Don’t we see the problem with that? Credit card companies are extending credit to students who generally have no income. They might have jobs, but it’s only enough money to live on, not pay off credit card balances every month. What About Emergencies? There is too much temptation for a broke college student to have a credit card sitting in their pocket. No matter how responsible they are, they’ll end up using it once for something that’s not an emergency, and then it’s downhill from there. If you are worried about emergencies and you want to give your kid a real graduation gift, open up a high-yield, online savings account for them with $500 to $1,000 in it. Don’t tell them the username
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Kids And Money: Should Your Kid Apply For A Credit Card While In College?
