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November 4, 2009

Avoiding post-holiday debt: Don't be among the 13.5 million!

This holiday season, it may be more important than ever to avoid impulse buying that leaves you with a holiday debt hangover in the New Year. A survey we conducted in early October showed that six percent of adults, or roughly 13.5 million consumers, were still saddled with debt from last year’s holiday spending.  

Odds are you’ll be paying especially hefty finance charges this year if charging a lot of gifts leaves you carrying a balance on your cards. That’s because many banks are jacking up rates or imposing other finance charges in the form of annual fees before their ability to do so is crimped by federal credit card reform rules that become effective in February. For instance, Wells Fargo recently notified cardholders it plans to raise interest rates by 3 percentage points starting Nov. 30, while Citibank in late October hiked rates for many of its customers to 29.99 percent.

The good news is that many consumers already are making progress in slashing their card debt. A recent Consumer Reports survey found that more than a third of consumers polled said they had paid off and closed a card account this year.  And the Federal Reserve’s latest monthly Consumer Credit Report showed that revolving credit, which is largely card debt, decreased at an annual rate of 13 percent in August, to a total of  $897.6 billion. That’s down from $988.2 billion at the end of 2008.

Tightwad Tod offers some helpful tips on how to avoid holiday debt headaches here.-Andrea Rock

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