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In too deep

21 May 2003

In too deep cover

CAB clients' experiences of debt

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In too deep (Adobe Acrobat Document 0.58mb) - CAB clients' experiences of debt

Executive summary

1. Since 2000, there has been a debate between the credit industry, consumer organisations and the Government as to whether the UK is facing a problem of personal indebtedness. Over the last five years, Citizens Advice Bureaux UK wide have reported a substantial increase in the number of new debt enquiries. They are now dealing with well over a million new debt enquiries per year.  There has been a marked growth in the number of new enquiries about consumer credit where enquiries have risen by 47 percent over the five years to 2002. Consumer credit debt enquiries now form nearly two-thirds of all new enquiries about debt made to Citizens Advice Bureaux. Other advice providers have also reported a rise in the number of people contacting them for help with debt problems.

2. The increase in the number of people seeking help about their debt problems could be strongly related to economic boom. For many people, low rates of unemployment, low interest rates and soaring house prices have resulted in a substantial increase in mortgage and consumer credit lending. However lenders’ figures appear to show that the indebtedness problem may be limited; for example the proportion of accounts in arrears has remained the same for the last 5 years.

3. In order to understand more about the reasons for the increase in the number of new debt enquiries, the CAB service decided to undertake a major piece of research to find out more about the problems faced by our debt clients. In May 2001, a 10 percent sample of bureaux UK-wide were asked to survey their new debt clients in that month.  Over 900 people participated in the survey. The research found that:

4. Recent research for the Financial Services Authority suggests that as many as 6.1 million households face moderate difficulties paying their current credit and other commitments.  It is therefore important that initiatives to tackle debt are effective.

5. A sustainable strategy for preventing overindebtedness and resolving debt problems when they do arise, needs to cover a wide range of issues to be fully effective.  Initiatives which tackle irresponsible lending and borrowing, the level of benefits, take up of benefits and, for those in work, tax credits, lack of access to affordable credit, poor benefit administration, low pay and employment instability, as well as employer compliance with employment protection legislation, and access to advice all have a part to play in the prevention and resolution of debt problems.  

6. Although there are a multitude of governmental and other initiatives, the CAB service feels that they will not be effective for the following main reasons:

7. The CAB service recommends that a crosscutting governmental review should result in a full assessment of all strategies to tackle the problem of debt and develop strategies to fill any gaps, and to monitor whether further action is needed to tackle emerging trends.

8. Our other recommendations to tackle the problem of debt effectively are set out in Chapters 8 to 12.

In too deep (Adobe Acrobat Document 0.58mb) - CAB clients' experiences of debt