How Can Debt Be Prestigious?

Credit Card Creators Try to Convince Us Their Product is Prestigious.

Over 50 years ago, Frank McNamara of New York's Hamilton Credit Corporation came up with a way that businessmen could charge expenses at twenty seven different restaurants in New York by using one card, the Diner's Club card. Since it was available only
 to affluent business people, it was very prestigious - like an exclusive club. In reality, it wasn't a credit card, but a charge card shared by these twenty seven restaurants, who were then paid by Diner's Club - who required that the bill be paid in full every month.

The card was a simple paperboard thing that listed the restaurants where well-to-do business men could charge business lunches. It doesn't sound all that impressive, does it? Oh, but wait... there's more.

Less than a decade later, Bank of America created BankAmericard, which eventually became VISA. It wasn't until the 1960's that City Bank of New York issued the Everything card which eventually became MasterCard - and changed the way America spends its money.

Soon there was the purple card, as in royal purple. Less than a decade after the first American credit card had been issued, American Express had created a card that was again an expression of exclusivity. A few years later, the card was green, then it was gold, and finally, the most "exclusive," platinum.

It's not just anybody who can carry a platinum card, although many do. A purple or green or gold or platinum credit card, or any credit card, is not a sign of prestige. It's a sign of using money before you have it - also called borrowing and going into debt.

Most of us have credit cards of some sort. How we use them makes a big difference in how much they cost us. If we use them as a "line of credit" - i.e., buy things with the intention of paying them off over a long period of time, it can be very expensive.

Whether you want to use a credit card as an automatic loan or you want to pay off all charges every month, it's up to you. If you have a credit card with a low rate of interest, it could be well worth it to buy an item on credit if you will pay it off as quickly as possible - within a few months.

 
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Great information! We use credit cards for the rewards, but we also pay them off in full every month. I know many people who just pay the minimums and continue charging as well and it ends up being a never ending nightmare!

Posted on 04/02/2007 at 3:04:00 AM

This is a superlative article. I loved learning the history of the credit card.

Posted on 04/01/2007 at 5:04:00 PM

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