Even before this morning’s new low, Elizabeth Warren was suggesting we could see an old-fashioned, new-wave lay-away Christmas:
With Mastercard and Visa cards handed out like cheap candy, layaway plans had nearly disappeared. The old-fashioned method for budgeting–pay a few bucks each week on your purchases–made no sense to millions of customers who could take the goods home and pay a little each month forever after. For more than a decade, when I have taught 507(a)(7) priorities, I have had to explain these transactions to a roomful of students who have never even heard of pay-in-advance. (And special thanks to one of those students, Sydney Leavens, who recognized the connection to the K-Mart ad.)
Could this ad [link] be an early sign of how purchasing will change in America? A Pay-Now, Buy-Later plan will undoubtedly constrict spending in the short term, but in the long-term it would mean that the money that now goes to interest, fees and interchange fees (about $107 billion in 2007) can be used to buy socks, haircuts, prescription drugs and a million other goods and services.
Retailers pay about $23 billion in interchange fees so that their customers can use credit cards. Today’s retailers say they have no choice: so long as their competitors take credit cards, they must do the same or see their customers migrate elsewhere. But if credit availability constricts across the board for consumer, the long-term fallout for K-Mart and thousands of other retailers may not be all bad.