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Ask Dr. Don
By
Don
Taylor,
Ph.D.,
CFA
Bankrate.com |
In college with a maxed-out
credit card
Dear Dr. Don,
I have one, maxed-out credit card that I got when I was a freshman
in college. Now the interest rate is as high as 22 percent. My max
in the card was $1,000, and now the interest alone has accumulated
to about another $1,000, so my total is about $2,000.
I pay my minimum payments, but I really want to get
this debt paid off quickly. What is your advice? And if I should
get a bank loan, how much should I ask for? I only have a part-time
job because I am still in college.
Thanks,
Arti Anthropology
Dear Arti,
You're not alone. A lot of college students have trouble handling
credit. It's hard to turn things around when finance charges keep
accruing at 22 percent.
I used your numbers and Bankrate's Credit
Card Calculator: The true cost of paying the minimum and found
out it would take you about six years to pay off the balance if
you paid $50 a month. You'd also rack up another $1,600 in interest
expense.
If you were able to bump up that payment to $100 a
month you'd be free of this debt in just over two years and only
pay an additional $515 in interest expense. It's clear that you
need to jump-start a loan-repayment program.
It's not likely that you will be able to find a lender
to loan you the money to pay off this debt. Pick up a little overtime
in your part-time job, or find some other way to bump up your income
while you pay down this debt. Make it a priority without neglecting
your studies.
If you can't make that work, try talking to
your college financial-aid office. They can help you decide if a
student loan is feasible for you. Student loan programs aren't designed
to help you repay your credit cards, but you can use the loan proceeds
to pay college expenses while freeing up cash to pay down your credit
card debt.
-- Posted: July 11, 2002
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