Simon Read: Support this crackdown on legal loan sharks

Friday 24 June 2011 19:00 EDT
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Parliament is set to vote on the issue of high-cost credit on Tuesday. These are the pay-day loans, which have staggering APRs approaching 2,000 per cent. On the one hand, used carefully, they allow people to borrow £100 or so to help them over a short-term cash crisis.

For people who need money quickly, it can actually be cheaper to borrow using a pay-day loan than to slip into the red and face the high street banks' excessive fees and interest charges. On that basis a one-off tenner or £20 charge for the convenience, may seem high, but reasonable enough, considering the alternatives.

But the big worry is that people don't just borrow once: they go back to the pay-day lender again and again. If they end up paying a £20 each time for the privilege, it quickly turns into being a very expensive way to borrow. It's then a small step to falling into a spiral of debt where struggling folk are forced to take out a new expensive short-term loan each month just to make ends meet.

For that reason we need pay-day lenders to be better regulated and caps put on the amount they can charge customers. What we must avoid is interest being charged on interest until borrowers are forced to do without essentials just to service their debts.

Labour MP Stella Creasy – who is leading the parliamentary fight to introducing caps on the cost of credit – calls pay-day lenders "legal loan sharks". She wants the Government to intervene in the market to cut down the numbers of people falling into financial misery after using the services of a payday lender.

It's becoming more crucial as the Coalition Government's ill-thought through cutbacks begin to bite. More people than ever appear to be turning to short-term credit to survive. In fact, Moneysupermarket last month reported a 58 per cent spike in demand for pay-day loans.

So let's remind MPs of their responsibility to all of us, their constituents and hope they vote for the amendment to the Finance Bill. As Stella Creasy says: "We must ensure that our constituents are no longer preyed upon by exploitative lenders seeking to inflate their profit margins at the expense of people's livelihoods."

Talking of helping people with debt worries, the debt co-op Zero-Credit has just released an online video guide to checking a lender's or debt adviser's licence, to ensure they're not crooks. It's at http://zero-credit.co.uk/tools.html (you can also join the co-op, which fights for borrowers' rights, for £1.)

s.read@independent.co.uk

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