This whole post is so ridiculous, I almost didn't even bother answering it.
It's funny because it's an accurate description. The short list you give is nothing like the entirety of how the score is gotten, and as I said, accurately, it is affected negatively by decisions which are actually wise in terms of personal finance: staying out of revolving debt.
You're the one who gave a short list. You said that credit is built on debt, period. I gave a much wider description of ALL the elements involved in building a credit score.
I made it clear that a person can have a good credit score WITHOUT carrying debt - without a SPECK of debt in fact - but I notice you didn't address that portion of my post.
I'm not at all surprised.
Propaganda.
It's possible you never got this kind of feeling because, as a financial industry drone you felt a false sense of security, Surely the industry you worked in could never harm you. Certainly because you maintain a good credit score, there couldn't possibly be anything actually wrong with the system!
It's possible - but this is not the case. First of all, as a person who worked in the financial industry for about eight years, I have knowledge about banks and credit, and insight into the industry that you, very obviously, do not have.
There's plenty wrong with the system - you're just picking the wrong things to harp about - and using a lot of misinformation to do so.
As long as it doesn't happen to you, it cannot possibly happen!
This is one of the more ridiculous statements you made.
You know what - working in a bank gave me a lot of insight into a very wide array of personal situations - from personal triumphs to tragedies. Of course any number of terrible things could happen to me. That's why I plan as best I can and try to make the best decisions I can financially. That's why my husband and I have put aside enough money to live on for at LEAST a year, probably more, if NEITHER of us could work at all.
However a very real pressure is placed to have that score. A high score, a socially acceptable score. There's an entire cottage industry just to be able to check it at any time. To deny it is dishonest.
That's why I didn't deny it. Hell, we didn't even talk about that aspect of the scenario.
I don't know what this "socially acceptable" thing is you're talking about though, and all this "pressure" you're describing. Weeks at a time go by without me even thinking once about my credit score. I would hardly call that "pressure."
Of course you would; you need to cast a negative light on me, as Im trashing the industry you worked in.
No, this is YOUR tactic, not mine. You're the one who is throwing personal insults around, not me.
I don't particularly love the banking industry - it's got it's flaws, just like any other industry I worked in. And I don't even WORK in banking anymore. I have no need to sugarcoat the industry - and I certainly don't have some sort of idealistic view of it. I understand how it works - and you obviously do not.
I specified directly how my score is garbage:
Nope. All you said is that you don't have any revolving credit. That alone will not create a "garbage" score. I clearly explained that this is only one of MANY factors, and that even a person with zero credit who has otherwise good credit factors, such as no negative loans or debts, no lay pays, solid work history, etc. should still have a good credit score and be able to obtain a loan with a good interest rate.
If your score is indeed "garbage" as you state it is - it's not simply because you have no revolving credit. I don't believe that for an instant. If your score is garbage, it reflects other negative factors in your life/work history/prior debts or loans or bills/etc.
I don't choose to do that: I choose to remain out of debt, which is the smartest course of action. Even your own father is a slave to the system exactly as I described: what purpose does his making arbitrary purchases on a credit card he doesn't actually want, serve him? Oh wait, that's right, it's just like I said: he feels the pressure upon him to maintain a digital score which serves him no good purpose, because people just like you, pitch it to him and everyone else that having a good credit score is something you NEED.
Nope. MY dad uses a particular credit card because he earns lots of points at a certain sporting goods store.
Like I clearly pointed out, he turns right around and pays the balance immediately, so he's not "in debt." Meanwhile, he's earned the points and gets all sorts of cool tools and toys from this place. It's like Christmas every month for him!
I do the same thing with my Discover card and large purchases. It's so cool that they send me gift cards just for using that card!
Even if my father didn't use that card, (and remember, I said that he has no debt, and hasn't had any sort of debt for at least 20 years), his credit score would be around 800. He just likes the free stuff he gets from using that card.
Essentially your family anecdote proves my point. He has no real reason to have and use that credit card - except to keep his imaginary score good for when bankers look at it.
He has no need for bankers to look at his score - he has no debt and will not need to have any debt most likely for the rest of his life.
Like I said, he gets free stuff for using the card.
By the way - an aside note. My father had never even been LATE on ANY sort of payment in his entire LIFE till about a year ago, when he forgot to mail a payment in on some little bill he had. He was TICKED at himself!
He's a trip.
Besides, interest compounds daily. Although it is possible that his card offers zero interest if ... they likely have service charges or are otherwise milking him for a few pennies or dollars here and there; that's how they work.
My dad has never paid a penny of interest, or any sort of service charge on this card. Hey, guess what - if you have made good financial decisions for a lifetime, you can qualify for all sorts of great deals.
By the way, I have a very similar deal on my Discover card. If I pay the balance in full each month, I pay zero interest. There are no service charges. And I get points when I use the card, that I can redeem with Discover for cold, hard cash.
Don't take my trashing of the corrupt credit system so personally.
Oh, I'm not. I'm just amazed at how ridiculous your arguments are.
lol, 'objective reality'. Artificial numbers representing your behavior is not 'objective' in any sense of the word.
The numbers represent risk factors. That's all. If your score is garbage, it represents that you are a higher risk for a lender. And apparently you are - based on what I see in your attitude, you'd have no qualms whatsoever about walking on a loan, because you see lenders as "the bad guy" and yourself as a perpetual victim.
The bank does take your house away though and keep all the money you ever paid into it.
Actually, as I explained to you already, this isn't even true.
If you have equity in the house, and the bank sells your house, if there is money left over after the sale, you will receive that money.
In other words, say I've got $50,000 in equity and owe the bank $100,000. Say my house is worth $150,000 and the bank forecloses on it and sells it for $150,000. The bank gets their $100,000 and I get my $50,000.
This is a simplistic picture, and the reality is that very few homes with any significant equity are actually foreclosed on, for a number of reasons, including the fact that if a person actually has equity in a home, they have more of a reason to actually try to avoid foreclosure.
Most homes that are foreclosed on are "owned" by people who have little, to ZERO equity - which is yet another reason why it's not a good idea for people to buy a home with no down payment. They actually have no ownership in a home. If you have no equity in a house you're living in, you own nothing. And when you foreclose on it, you've lost nothing. All you've done is pay rent to live somewhere.