From CNN | Americans are not as far behind on their bills as a year ago. The number of consumers behind on their credit card payments fell to an eight-year low in the first quarter of 2010, the American Bankers Association said Wednesday. Overall, delinquencies across a wide-range of consumer debt categories have also fallen.
High unemployment and plummeting home values during the financial meltdown appear to have spurred consumers to shore up their finances and banks to limit their lending, resulting in fewer Americans being late with payments, the industry group said.
About 3.88 percent of bank credit card accounts were past due by 30 days or more in the first quarter of the year — the first time since 2002 that the rate has fallen below 4 percent, the ABA said Wednesday.
And ABA’s composite ratio, which tracks delinquencies across eight key categories, fell to 2.98 percent from 3.19 percent the previous quarter — a sign of modest improvement in the U.S. economy, the group said.
“Consumers are doing a much better job managing their finances, building their savings and spending and borrowing less,” ABA Chief Economist James Chessen said.
The ABA’s report confirms what other government studies have shown: Americans appear to be taking a more prudent approach to their finances.
The Commerce Department’s most recent reports on personal spending and income showed consumers stashed a higher portion of their earnings into savings in May than they did a month earlier.
But while Americans may be more careful with their money, that doesn’t mean the economy is a bed of roses.
Unemployment, at 9.5 percent, is still high 9.5 percent. There was a loss of 125,000 jobs in June. That was the first month of job losses in a year. And that doesn’t include the record-high 1.21 million so-called “discouraged workers” who want to work, but aren’t even looking because of the weak labor market.
Because consumer debt delinquencies are directly related to job losses and income trends, the ABA’s second quarter report is likely to reflect the slower economic growth, Chessen said.