According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, balances dropped an average of 10 percent from March to June of last year, and the trend continued through 2020, proving true even for people who had been struggling financially before the pandemic. New delinquencies on loans and credit card accounts also fell, after being flat or increasing gradually in 2019.
Experts attribute the improvement to a combination of stimulus payments, expanded unemployment insurance benefits and reduced spending on activities like dining out, entertainment and travel, which left many people with extra cash to pay down debt. That in turn pushed credit scores higher: The average score hit 711 in 2020, Experian reports—up eight points from 2019.
“A significant group now find themselves in a much better position than they were a year ago,” says Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTree. “A lot of Americans need credit cards less than they have for quite some time.”
This story is from the May 21 - 28, 2021 (Double Issue) edition of Newsweek.
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This story is from the May 21 - 28, 2021 (Double Issue) edition of Newsweek.
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