Despite being more optimistic about their finances, South African consumers are still battling with debt as personal loan interest rates reach their highest levels, while their income growth does not keep up with inflation, and they have to use unsecured credit to make up the shortfall.
Although sentiment improved since the suspension of load shedding, the formation of a coalition government, reduced inflation and lower interest rates, and the ability to access some retirement savings under the two-pot retirement system, consumers are still under severe financial strain according to the DebtBusters’ Debt Index for the third quarter based on a quarterly evaluation of debt counselling applications.
Despite the series of positive developments, demand for debt counselling increased by 6% compared to the same quarter last year, and online debt management grew by 10%, Benay Sager, executive head of DebtBusters, says.
“Over the past eight years, consumers’ income growth did not keep up with significant cost increases, and consumers are using short-term unsecured credit and personal loans to make up the shortfall. As a result, consumers must allocate two-thirds of their take-home pay for credit repayments.”
He says 82% of people who apply for debt counselling have a personal loan and 53% a payday loan, at a time when unsecured interest rates are at 26.7%, close to the maximum of 29%.
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Other findings from the Debt Index show that compared to 2016, consumers who applied for debt counselling had:
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Sager also notes that since 2016, average unsecured loan size increased by 57% while the volume of new unsecured loans declined by 30%. “This means larger unsecured (personal) loans are granted to a smaller number of consumers, highlighting that risk is concentrated on an ever-smaller group of consumers.
“For secured loans, in contrast, the number of loans decreased by 6%, but the average loan size increased by 33%.”
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Other key trends picked up in the report show:
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