ANDS! wrote:
You can live life without credit.
Of course you can. You can also live your life w/o a car, friends, a degree, etc. - however the person who has any of these over the person who doesn't, probably has an easier time navigating the Sea Of Life. The reason credit IS good, is because some people CAN'T save up all that cash, and its simply easier to pay 300 dollars a month (which would be like an 8000-9000 dollar purchase) for a "sweet ride".
Obviously if you can buy outright, dont finance. But even if you can buy outright, and dont have much credit - dump a ton of money on it, so that you're looking at 10-dollar payments a month (it wouldnt be that, but you know what I mean) to establish credit. You're not gonna get that great of a rate, and you'll probably need a co-signer, but it is a great way to go about putting some credit on the books because it just makes purchases in future that much easier.
Hah, I bought my car outright, I have plenty of friends, I have a scholarship, I'm only 21.
The problem with credit cards is that they have ingrained this "You must have good credit" BS into our skulls. You can have no credit and get a home loan. You just have to find a mortgage place that does their own underwriting. The moment your guy tries to pass you off to someone else you walk out of the place and go somewhere else.
Sure, you can pay off your credit card every month and stay debt free, but not everyone can do that. Something could come up, you could have spent more than you expected and only made a minimum payment that month and then the next month as well because of the first month, and so forth.
Credit cards make it VEEEEERY easy to snowball into debt. And it's hard to snowball your way back out of debt, I have a method for doing so, PM me for more information.
ANDS, you don't need to own that "sweet ride" right now. You can get a "duct-tape" ride, save up, sell the duct-tape ride, move up to the "rusty-bolts" ride, save up, sell that, etc. In about 2 years you'll have something nice.
I spent $1000 on my bike, I'll ride it into the ground, all the while saving up to purchase my next bike, possibly a Bandit 1250, I'll pay cash for it, walk out the door saving the $1500 I would have payed in interest and pay for my insurance, which doesn't have to be full coverage because I don't have a bank telling me I have to.
If credit cards worked out so you got "free use" of their money, how the hell do they stay in business?
[img]http://content.ytmnd.com/content/8/c/f/8cfad8ebc281805945b49541a1f00d48.gif[/img]
1980 Suzuki GS550E "Miranda" (Retired)
1986 Honda Nighthawk CB700SC "Valarie"