• @[email protected]
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    396 months ago

    A lot of the knee-jerk reactions reek of avocado toast and bootstraps against The Youths™ and the article starts off a bit as living beyond your means, I shook my cane and felt it too reading the headline at first.

    But honestly, think about how these financing options are smoothing out paychecks for young people and low income folks, giving them more of a buffer in actual cash to deal with day to day stuff that might not be covered by these services. And anything that can put the screws to credit card late fees and interest and the fucking scumball payday loan industry is absolute tits IMO.

    I remember being poor and hungry early in life… absolutely would have taken advantage of predictable lower payments on as much as possible just to have more cash around because I knew just how likely it was to try cranking my junker of a car one morning and realize I’m walking to work for the next few paychecks.

    • @[email protected]
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      286 months ago

      predictable lower payments on as much as possible just to have more cash around

      It doesn’t give you “more cash”. You are borrowing money and interest is definitely baked into it. Credit cards already let you borrow money for a month for free. Plus they have cash back / points and great fraud protection. Plus they help you build your credit score.

      You can get a basic credit card for $0 per year with a low limit, even if you have no credit. Don’t ever use “pay later” shit. Why do you think they invented it? It’s better for them, not you.

      • @[email protected]
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        106 months ago

        I mean the one time I used one of these “pay in four payments” kind of things there was no interest added on. It just let me split up the cost easier rather than having to do it all at once and subsist on very little till I get money next.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          I bought a fridge with a 3 month scheme when I was broke enough that a new fridge would’ve been the end of that month’s money. Zero interest.

          Don’t think I’ll ever finance a pizza over 4 payments like some other comment said though. Unless it’s my last pizza before I decide to stop existing or something.

    • @[email protected]
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      46 months ago

      How old are Gen Z kids? 12-26 years old? Man, I was broke as shit from 12-26 too. Didn’t even have avocado toast money.

    • @mindbleach
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      06 months ago

      think about how these financing options are smoothing out paychecks for young people and low income folks

      What actually happens, every time, is that prices go up until financing is the only way to afford anything. Debt detaches prices from reality. It breaks unaffordability as a mechanism to keep prices down. Student loans are how college tuition got so high, you require student loans. Mortgages are how housing prices got so high, you require a mortgage. Some of it is increased competition from people who were simply too poor to be in the market - some of it is plain old greed.

      Low-income families are hit hardest, because they get roped into this shit for things other people can still afford. Rent-to-own furniture winds up costing them multiple times what anyone else is paying, due to long-ass lease terms. It becomes a loan with triple-digit interest.

      Depending on how hoity-toity your taste in literature might be, see either David Graeber’s “Debt: The First 5000 Years,” or Sam Vime’s boots theory from Discworld.