CREDIT CARDS VS. DEBT-FREE LIVING 2
Who is Better Off: A Person Using Credit Cards or a Person Refraining from Any Loans?
The world is obsessed with credit and America is no exception. In many countries, more
so the developed world, having no credit score rating is unusual. In fact, the law stops short of
illegalizing debit card purchases in the U.S (Ramsey, 2013). Debit card purchases often elicit
curious looks from sales assistants. The reason this happens is simple. The financial industry has
been meticulous at convincing society that the fastest way to get ahead in life is through debt.
What it fails to disclose is that it makes huge profits off this debt. Gradually, though, society is
beginning to divide into ardent believers in credit cards and a few who can see past the financial
industry’s narrative on credit cards and have taken to refraining from debt (Ramsey, 2013). This
emergent trend gives rise a fundamental question about the prudence of either option.
This write-up adds its voice to the discourse concerning whether to use of credit cards or
not. More than enough times, businesses have faced injunctions due to unscrupulous business
practices. The practices in question sometimes include the issuance of misleading information to
the public via advertisements. Financial institutions are equally guilty of this behavior. The 2008
global financial crisis, for example, was an outgrowth of this behavior (Ramsey, 2013). Since the
legal repercussions of unethical business conduct are often dire, financial institutions find a safe
way of misleading the public to fall into their snares. Credit cards are a classic example of this
change of tact. Currently, underage American children are targets of credit card advertisements
(Bae & Ott, 2008). The sad part is that the companies consciously keep information about the
repayment of credit card debt hazy. In effect, users sink into perpetual debt that often leads to
financial ruin (Bae & Ott, 2008).
To get an impression of how deep the lie about credit cards is, one simply needs to look
at how the American society functions. The financial industry has elevated credit cards to a point