Will debt undo us?
published in the Church Times (3
October, 2003)
The wages of borrowing
is human misery. Antonia Swinson, a financial journalist
for many years, says we shouldn't call it credit —
what we are talking about is usury.
DEBT is everywhere. Each
month the figures become mote dizzying: "House loans
boom takes personal debt to £888 billion" screamed
the headline in the Daily Mail in the first week of September,
while the Wall Street Journal agonised as America's "consumer-debt
bomb reached $8.7 trillion [that's $87,000 billion]".
Such debt is surely unsustainable. What will happen? How
will people survive when the credit crunch bites?
Whenever there is a disconnection
between our financial life and our spiritual values, ordinary
people are used and abused, and others — almost always
that unholy alliance of financial services and landed interest
— get rich at our expense.
Connecting God and money
is not for the faint-hearted Christian. We have been brainwashed
by that "render unto Caesar" line, programmed
into thinking that it is somehow not possible to discuss
our financial lives in godly terms. Yet I am certain that
money, the stuff we think about dozens of times a day, is
on the front line in our battle to find an honest relationship
with God. So let us start by looking at who benefits from
this debt moun-tain, and at what the Church can do about
it.
The democratisation of debt
in the late 1990s was engineered by respected, knighted
bankers and politicians who, through deregulation, low interest
rates and lax lending-practices, created a giant credit
bubble that has enslaved the many and enriched the few.
Only as far back as the 1980s, people were supplicants in
a queue for mortgages, and con-sidered chequebooks rather
racy, never mind credit cards.
But as debt has been transformed
into the lifestyle choice for successful professionals (that
is, anyone with a bank account), temptation is now the norm.
We are not, however, being empowered — just sold a
line. What price progress, when debt helplines are swamped
with desperate callers, and repossessions soar?
More than six million households
now have difficulty juggling monthly bills. Nine million
Britons are "financial phobes", too frightened
to open bank statements or attend; to their finances. The
human cost of debt — pain, lost hope, misery, broken
relationships — is unimaginable. And this is in the
respectable, credit worthy slice of the market.
Down at the "sub prime
lending" end of the scale, where lurk the loan sharks
and doorstep lenders, is human misery mat can blight generations.
At present, according to New Economic Foundation's latest
debt report, 1.5 million people have people knocking on
their door for cash payments each week. And it is big business
— loan companies exact payment of loans at 1000-2000
per cent interest; average borrowings are £940; the
sector is worth £3.3 billion.
Britain is well-known among
predatory lenders as baying a laissez-faire approach to
predatory lending, which says much about the low priority
that poor people have in Government. Why should it be easier
to set up as a moneylender in the UK man as a credit union,
which could effectively drive out money-lenders that asset-strip
whole neigh-bourhoods? Only now is the Government introducing
a White Paper to discuss credit-lending practices.
It's time to label things
properly. We should talk not of "credit" but of
"usury". Debt needs to regain its old stigma.
How about this for a 21st-century platinum-card advertisement:
"Will you pay with a Usury Card, sir? That'll do nicely."
That might make us think twice.
In The Divine Comedy,
Dante puts usurers (or moneylenders) in the seventh circle
of the Inferno, sitting on burning sands with cash-boxes
around their necks.
Our ancestors, living through wars, famines, and hardship,
would have seen debt very differently from us. As viewed
through a Judaeo-Christian prism, debt equaled slavery.
It was a message rammed home, week after week, from the
pulpit. In Genesis, the bankrupt Egyptians plead with Pharaoh's
chief accountant, who predicted the boom and the bust: "Our
money is all spent ... there is nothing left ... Buy us
and our land for food, and we with our land will be slaves
to Pharaoh." How low can you go?
That attitude to debt has
disappeared, in our secular age. Yet we are no less vulnerable:
It takes only a big piece of spending, or a sudden change
of circumstances, to tip us into unsustainable debt.
Keith Tondeur runs the charity
Credit Action, a Christian, debt help-line that, witti associated
organisations, counsels 150,000 people a year. When I Speak
to) him on th& telephone, he has just been advising
a vicar who has unsecured debts of more than £110,000.
It's a depressingly common experience, apparently he has
several new cases every week of six-figure debt burdens.
"Usually people take
on the debt they feel-they can repay, but it only takes
illness, unemployment, an in-terest rise .or a property
slump, and suddenly it is unsustainable. If you borrow £30K
or £40K, you are paying £250-£500 a month.
This soon, rolls up, and becomes £60K-£70K.
The interest is now £500-£1000 a month. At this
point the only solution is for a relative to step forward
to pay up a proportion and ask for the rest to be written
off — or bankruptcy."
Down at the harsh end of
the debt culture, Church Action On Poverty has been doing
sterling work for years, banging government and policy advisers'
heads together, not least with their innovative "Debt
on the Doorstep" campaign (News, 6 December). It seems
extraordinary to me, a lay person, that their work appears
to be considered by Chris-tians in the UK as just another
good cause among many, when their cam-paign should lie at
the heart of every congregation and church office.
As the fin-de-siecle bull-market
boomed, we. all used debt to buy lifestyle and shares, believing
that the markets would rise ever upwards and float us out
of the need to live within our means. Houses turned into
piggy-banks, whose value could be raided; we thought market
economics would supply our lifestyle, and the basic laws
of money management no longer applied to us.
And who has profited from
our ballooning indebtedness? First, it is convenient for
the state: it keeps us quiet, in the 21st-century equivalent
of domestic service. Students will hardly riot when they
have a £20,000 debt on their backs. The rest of us,
who stay sane only by contemplating the equity in our houses,
generously keep the economy rolling along, paying debt out
of highly taxed income.
Employers benefit from our
debt, too: we are unlikely to rock the boat when we have
mortgages to pay. Reading articles in the human-resources
press, I often wonder whether our culture of office bullying
is debt-driven: the bullied, who have bills due at the end
of the month, are not free to walk out.
Then there is the huge and
competitive financial-services industry, making us all manner
of secured and unsecured loans. And, finally, the landowners
in the UK, who have grown effortlessly rich with the explosion
in asset values. The £680-billion mortgage-debt mountain
in the UK is owing to a property mar-ket that is based on
an artificially tight land supply: 99.9 per cent of us are
squashed on to less than 7.5 per cent of the UK land mass
(see Kevin Cahill's Who Owns Britain, published by Canongate).
While we service our mortgages
— a feudal term that, literally, means a bond until
death — 189,000 people, roughly the population of
Luton, continue to get rich by owning two-thirds of all
UK land. Over the past 20 years, as ordinary people I have
been ground Between the millstones of an increasingly American-style
market economy and the enduring feudal patterns of land
ownership, the result has been not just the biggest personal-debt
mountain in Europe, but the worst work-life balance in Europe,
too.
Today, in my view, the Churches
can make several moves on this issue. They can contribute
to the Government's forthcoming White Paper on creditlending
practices. They should be lobbying for a legal interest-rate
ceiling, as exists in Germany, and for the abolition of
domestic bailiffs. They should invest heavily in services
offering debt-counselling, financial education and budgeting
advice.
As for land, I believe that
the time has come for Christians to engage in popular debate
on fiscal reform, campaigning, as our 19th-century and early-20th-century
forebears did, to replace existing property taxes with a
tax on the rental value of land, and for bet-ter infrastructure
and public services.
Finally, in every area there should be high-profile, cleverly
marketed church credit unions, just as there are church
schools. Churches could co-operate across denominations,
marketing Jesus's radical message of stewardship with as
much energy and pizzaz as the loan-sharks. A pioneering
example is the Waltham Forest Community Credit Union
which plans to open its doors in November this year, having
attracted support from 120 faith groups, including the Catholic
Church, Church of England, local synagogues and mosques.
Of course it will always be harder to set up a credit union
than a non legit money lender, but the good news which needs
to be shouted from the rooftops is that to borrow £1000
you only pay back £1,065 — the legal maximum
is just 1% over a reducing balance at just 12.68%. Beat
that Mr Moneylender. And of course there is all the incentive
to start saving too, investing in your own community. In
other words, showing good faith. There is already £262
million in the pot so, what are we waiting for? For there
is no time to lose. I don’t want to sound over-dramatic,
but I do believe that there is a reckoning for all.
Some things are not susceptible
to seasonal change. High-street chains are currently filling
their stores with attractive consumables in their annual
attempt to turn Advent into a time of fevered shopping.
Official figures released on Monday show, however, that
high spending is now an all-year-round activity. The British
added a further £1.6 billion to their personal-debt
burden in the month of August, 13.5 per cent more than the
same month last year. If mortgages are added to this sum,
the total personal debt stood at £9.3 billion. Each
household is calculated to owe 123 per cent of its income.
The UK is not alone. In
the United States, in the year leading up to June, a record
1.6 million people filed for bankruptcy. In Thailand, a
survey suggested that those earning between 20,000 and 30,000
Baht (£300-£450) a year owed an average of 710,800
Baht (£10,800). The Churches are used to campaigning
on behalf of debt-ridden countries; the debt problem, however,
strikes nearer to home, and takes no account of the general
prosperity of the country. One cause of anxiety is that
debt is still not seen as a problem — note the use
by economists of the phrase "the strength of borrowing";
periods of high borrowing are spoken of in terms of "consumer
confidence". Developed economies depend on high consumer
spending, and interest rates are adjusted, albeit cautiously,
in order to encourage this. The financial industry gets
alarmed only when a significant number of people default
on their repayment, i.e. drop out of the borrowing loop
— and sometimes not even then; the chairman of the
US federal reserve, Alan Greenspan, said last week that
many consumers were "experiencing significant financial
distress"; nevertheless, he said, "overall, the
level of debt is being serviced adequately."
Many of the people about
whom Antonia Swinson writes this week (page 15) would add
little to these global figures. They borrow relatively small
sums, since mortgages are seldom involved. Yet the "significant
distress" that she catalogues is profoundly troubling.
Debt is the Church's business, on pastoral grounds alone.
There is also much more theological work to be done in a
society in which debt and investment are interwoven, and
the state borrows from its citizens in the form of National
Insurance. It is unacceptable that so many on low incomes
should need to borrow in order to achieve a basic standard
of living, while others not very much higher up the socio-economic
ladder are being lured by the inflated cost of housing to
take ever greater risks by borrowing sums far in excess
of their income. When almost all are living on the never-never,
a prophetic Church will focus on the victims of reality.
Useful
links: Website of the British
Association of Credit Unions. They offer information
packs and can put churches in touch with study groups in
their area. Others: UK
Government Info, World
Council of Credit Unions, The
Regulator of Credit Unions, Campaign
for Fair Finance in the UK.