• antimidas@sopuli.xyz
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    3 hours ago

    Klarna 'bout to find out their business model doesn’t work as well in the US compared to the Nordic countries and EU, as

    1. People are already up to their neck in debt, putting Klarna to the back of the queue in case there’s a default
    2. Personal bankruptcy is a thing

    Especially the Northern Europe personal bankruptcy is really not a thing, fuck up your finances and you’re never going to see a penny you make (above what you strictly need to live) until everything has been paid back. Debt that is actively being collected also never expires.

    There’s a good reason Klarna’s been able to thrive in this environment – getting debt from banks is quite difficult and you have added security from the draconian collections process.

    In the US a company ignores credit scores at their own peril. The bankruptcy process is one of the few things that works better in the US than in e.g. my home country Finland.

      • antimidas@sopuli.xyz
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        1 hour ago

        Serves me right for assuming Germans had a similarly judgemental attitude to people who have ruined their finances. Thanks for the correction.

        Finns often have a very puritan attitude to debt (you should fear it like the devil), and in the common discussion it’s often attributed to the ethics of the Lutheran church. That’s at least partially the reason we still don’t have a real personal bankruptcy option. Somewhat surprising to me that a country that shares that value system could be that forgiving to people – I’m a bit envious even 😅

        Around here Klarna and other similar companies have long been seen as exploiting the fact that debt is really difficult to get through proper sources, and there’s a matching draconian bunch of collections agencies to support that business model. We’ve mainly been trying to tackle this by regulating the process of giving out loans, instead of giving people the necessary way out and thus giving the corporations an incentive to self-regulate.

        If bad credit is actually no longer possible to collect on, it ceases to be good business. Hats off to Germany for having a proper route out of predatory loans.

    • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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      5 hours ago

      No, it’s not. Financing is a great tool, and used wisely and with knowledge of interest rates and total cost, can elevate you quite a bit in life.

      This however is predatory lending, and it should not be used ever.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 minutes ago

        Predatory lending in the vast majority of developed economies other than the US:

        Adjustable rate home mortgages being issued to financially illeterate people without extremely clear and emphasized risks and disclosures.

        Same thing with HELOCs.

        Vehicles loans with rates over 15%.

        … subprime lending basically just is predatory lending that we don’t legally call predatory lending.

        Oh and then of course there is the entire system of Private Credit Shadow Banks who issue trillions in loans to all kinds of business entities, who basically aren’t required to do anywhere near the level of accounting rigor or transparency that actual banks do.

        We just basically don’t regulate them.

      • SpongyAneurysm@feddit.org
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        22 minutes ago

        Care to explain? I got raised differently and avoid financing like the plague, but I’m coming to the realization that I won’t be able to do that forever.

        How do you think it can be a net positive? Your insight might help me cope.

    • JayleneSlide@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      This is a financially naive and reductionist take, approaching financial illiteracy. Applied correctly, financing allows you to preserve liquidity while still leaving funds in accounts with higher returns. Financing also provides a hedge against inflation, e.g. real estate.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        30 minutes ago

        Financing also literally causes or just is monetary inflation, in a debt-based fiat currency system.

        Those with access to credit leverage it and prosper roughly proportional to their level of credit access, those without access to it pay the inflation tax and suffer.

        This is why capitalism has bubble/pop cycles, inherently, systemically, unavoidably.

        When your home is functionally your own personal bank, you want home values to keep going up… which necessarily causes less people to be able to afford homes, and in a society based on access to credit being necessary to ‘buy’ a home, this creates and exacerbates a class divide.

        (You really haven’t ‘bought’ your home untill you’ve fully paid off the mortgage, untill then you’re more or less doing a complex rent-to-own from the bank.)

        Its also why you get ‘too big to fail’ banks and other entities… they have a bunch of bad debt, and if they are forced to actually account for it, well that would mean so many write offs that it would massively decrease the money supply, which is a recession/depression.

        The same dynamic is at play with college costs.

        More financialized, more loans? Prices go up. Less people can afford college, or in our lovely system where student loans are not dischargeable in bankruptcy, more people become literal debt slaves.

        Same dynamic is also at play with vehicles, cars.

        … real estate is only a hedge against inflation in a society that is stratifying, becoming more inequitable.

        If that’s your inflation hedge strategy, you must understand that mass broad usage of this strategy actively causes the impoverishment of those who can’t afford super-inflating home prices.

        Super-inflating home values is the Boomers climbing a ladder, and then once they’re on top of it, constantly pulling that ladder higher, further and further away from the ground, from all their kids.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      3 hours ago

      I literally took out a mortgage to buy my house. That’s financing.

      If I lose my job and I’m not able to find another one then the bank will repossess my house, but that doesn’t make my purchase of my house a financially irresponsible decision. The repayments on my mortgage are considerably less than the rent that I used to pay, so I am much better off now than I was previously. Anyway I would have lost my rental had I stopped paying as well, so nothing’s really changed.

  • Lyra_Lycan@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    10 hours ago

    bro. Fucking – Think about it. Klarna pay in 3 installments divide the cost by 3 and take payments monthly. Month A, you pay one third. Month B you pay one third of months A and B. By month C onwards you’re consistently paying three thirds or 100% of the rent. You’d only defer yourself the value of one month’s rent over the span of two months. Pointless.

    • cdf12345@lemmy.zip
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      9 hours ago

      That’s how fucked our economy is. There is a significant number of people so close to the edge that buying an extra 10 days before eviction is the final gasp before becoming homeless.

      • chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Yes. Previously the alternative was payday loans, which charged exorbitant interest rates.

        People have tried to ban these sorts of predatory loan businesses before but it usually forces people into the hands of organized crime loan sharks who charge even more exorbitant interest and exact brutal punishments on people who don’t pay up.

        • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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          7 hours ago

          They should be illegal. The literal only difference between these ‘services’ and the mob is they typically don’t break your knees.

          But that’s not the only despicable thing about the mafia’s racket.

          These people squeeze the last blood from people who often become homeless anyhow; whereas if landlords had souls, many people could at least keep their housing and not be so vulnerable to predators.

      • bstix@feddit.dk
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        2 hours ago

        No, but there are fees for late payments and other special situations.

        Their main income is from the transaction fees that they charge the merchants.

        The idea is that people who don’t have money can spend money and create a transaction fee on a sale that wouldn’t otherwise have happened if they didn’t lend the money. That way it’s the same as a credit card that you only pay monthly.

        The difference is that the payments can be split, so that the customers can … uh … utilize their entire credit maximum every month…

        Needless to say, this kind of credit maximum optimization can end really badly for people who have unstable incomes. The same kind of people who might be tempted to use it.

        • Victor@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Yeah, exactly. It’s very predatory.

          I don’t think I’m their intended customer demographic. 😅 I use it to keep a tight check on all my purchases. Recently started doing the monthly invoice thing as well, so neat and tidy. One payment every month, then rearrange money in our bank accounts as needed based on shared economy with the wife. Bish bash bosh.

        • Victor@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          And where is that? 🤔

          Where I live there’s a bit of interest when you postpone your payments further than 30 days. Other than that, no interest. Just like a regular credit card.

  • BoJackHorseman@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Those who made Usury mainstream now control the western world and bomb people who still don’t do Usury.

    • Fizz@lemmy.nz
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      8 hours ago

      Hell yeah killing millions of innocent people and starving 50 million more because you dont like a Swedish finance app

      • SpiceDealer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 hours ago
        1. The first four words of my comment were “I’m no Maoist” quite clearly signaling that I don’t affiliate myself with Maoism.

        2. The rest of my comment was in reference to Mao’s Land Reform Movement (i.e. those oh-so famous landlord killing memes). You’re thinking about Mao’s Cultural Revolution and The Great Leap Foward which were separate incidents that did, indeed, kill and starve many innocent people. Mao was tyrant and despot but no one, absolutely no one, missed the landlords expect maybe the ones that fled to Daddy Chiang.

        This goes beyond not liking a Swedish finance app. This is about the dystopian absurdity of financing your rent payment. It sounds like a plot point from a William Gibson novel. You’re borrowing money, that you’ll pay back with interest, to have a roof over your head; a roof that is not even yours. Klarna would very happy to lend you that money so they can profit from debt and the landlord(s) will be happy because they’re still making money without providing value. You don’t have be Marxist to see why this is a problem.

        • Fizz@lemmy.nz
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          5 hours ago

          i dont affiliate myself with Mao but here is why murdering land lords was actually a good thing.

          Bro read the history trying to defend that is gross.

          It seems you hate the american lack of welfare not Klarna. Unless your issue is that poor people have access to credit? I think thats their right and it would be fucked to deny them that. If we compare the situation with klarna vs without they miss their rent payment.

          Even in countries where you lose your job and the government gives you money and pays your rent these people would still spend irresponsibly and get into debt.

  • istdaslol@feddit.org
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    13 hours ago

    People already put rent on their credit card to pay it off in chunks. This is just Klarna tapping in that market

    • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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      5 hours ago

      My credit card gives me 3% on rent. So I just put it on the card on the first, pay it off on the second. Give a 3% discount on rent every month. Lol

    • yesman@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      People already put rent on their credit card to pay it off in chunks. This is just Klarna tapping in that market

      People using CC to pay rent isn’t reassuring, it’s more alarming. Paying for housing on short-term, high-interest credit is financial insanity and implies profound dysfunction if not desperation.

      • istdaslol@feddit.org
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        12 hours ago

        Well if you don’t pay they can evict you very fast. So if you need the money yesterday you have to accept 12%pa

        • Zorcron@piefed.zip
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          8 hours ago

          You get charged a 3% transaction fee for using a credit card, which more than wipes out the value of any points you might earn.

          Tap for spoiler

          (Excluding the Bilt card, which used to let you earn 1% on rent and they processed it like an ACH/bank debit, so no credit card fee. But they recently restructured their rewards and it’s not nearly as easy to profit now.)

          • Holytimes@sh.itjust.works
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            5 hours ago

            Not every card gets charged a 3% mine for example doesn’t. I get 3% back on rent, housing and insurance on my card. There’s no fees involved. So it’s just a flat 3% discount.

            Pay rent with card in the first, pay it off on the second when it posts.

          • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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            7 hours ago

            X1 used to give 3 points and my buddy’s rental house charged a 2 and change percent fee. He could only get full point values certain places so he’d save up all the points and that was his Christmas fund. He’d bank $600/yr ( about $500 real dollars from paying the transaction fee plus the extra hundred-ish bucks in points he’d get for free). They recently went to a 1.5 point model but kept the restrictions on where you could spend to get the full point value. Guess what card of his never gets used now.

    • errer@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      A ton of property management companies charge like 3-5% “convenience” charge for using a credit card, meaning even with cash back you lose some money.

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        3 hours ago

        Given that those fees are typically meant to cover processing fees and credit cards typically offer rewards because they effectively give you a cut of the processing fee this would make sense.

    • bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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      13 hours ago

      I tend to forget that salaries are paid weekly in the US. Then this makes at least somewhat sense.

        • bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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          13 hours ago

          Well, I’m used to monthly, both for rent and for salaries. So biweekly is still strangely often to me.

          But thanks for correcting me.

          • RamRabbit@lemmy.world
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            12 hours ago

            Monthly or biweekly are both common in the US for salaries. And biweekly being the most common for hourly. Really just depends on your employer.

            But, bills always come in monthly, which makes the monthly budgeting simple. A biweekly bill would fuck over a bunch of people as occasionally it would hit three times in a month.

            • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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              4 hours ago

              Really just depends on your employer.

              specifically, in statesia it depends on: the size of your employer (how many employees they have) and whether you have a union that has negotiated a specific pay term.

              source:am expert, i think it’s in publication 15B

      • Dave@lemmy.nz
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        13 hours ago

        But then why isn’t rent paid weekly?

        Where I live, weekly or fortnightly pay is more common than monthly, and rent is almost always paid weekly.

        • bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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          13 hours ago

          But then why isn’t rent paid weekly?

          rent is almost always paid weekly.

          Did you mean monthly in that last sentence?

          • kkj@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            12 hours ago

            The first is referring to the US, the second to where Dave lives (I assume New Zealand).

          • Dave@lemmy.nz
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            12 hours ago

            You said it makes sense that in the US people get paid weekly (and pay rent monthly) so having a service that lets you pay rent off each week makes sense.

            I’m asking why in the US people don’t pay rent weekly. Where I live it’s the most common way of doing it.

            • RamRabbit@lemmy.world
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              12 hours ago

              I’m asking why in the US people don’t pay rent weekly. Where I live it’s the most common way of doing it.

              Basically all bills in the US come in monthly. Keeps the number of transfers, letters, and emails down. And as everything is on the same schedule, it works pretty well.

              A biweekly bill would fuck over a bunch of people as it would occasionally come in three times in a month; necessitating a larger amount of cash on hand to account for these months. (And people are, overall, really bad about having any cash on hand)

              Edit: Rejiggered the comment a bit

              Edit 2: People get paid in the US either monthly or biweekly.

              • Dave@lemmy.nz
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                12 hours ago

                People get paid in the US either monthly or biweekly.

                Ah, this is different than the other comment implied. They said:

                I tend to forget that salaries are paid weekly in the US. Then this makes at least somewhat sense.

  • rogsson@piefed.social
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    12 hours ago

    Dystopian fucking timeline. Around every corner there seemingly waits billionaires waiting to fuck ppl over

  • JohnnyFlapHoleSeed@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    My dad paid 140k to buy a lot and build a house about 25-30 years ago. It’s back up for sale…$475k. in that time, minimum wage went from $5.15 an hour to $7.25 in that save time frame.

    People are still working 40+ hour weeks, and healthcare is somehow costs MORE, along with everything else.

    I don’t fucking think immigrants had anything to do with any of that.

    • forrgott@lemmy.sdf.org
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      11 hours ago

      The role immigrants play is involuntary, so blaming them is asinine. But they do fit in the equation. An average American has little to no financial security (by design), leaving many in a constant state of desperation. If anything, immigrants are even more desperate to make a living away from whatever situation they were trying to get away from, thus willing to accept even lower pay. But on top of that, many are manipulated into a situation where they are trapped in an “illegal” status and forced to accept sub-minimum wages or get deported.

      Make no mistake, the vast majority of immigrants arrive here legally, but are then victimized by our capitalist class. And in the end, they get blamed for the situation. Fuck that.

      The class divide all over the world needs to be destroyed. But that will require solidarity amongst the worldwide working class who have been brainwashed into a completely illogical fear of their peers, just because of an imaginary line drawn by sociopathic fuckwit pedophiles, who do not, and never have, deserved anything even resembling respect.

    • petersr@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      That’s rent without Klarna. You can probably think of rent with Klarna as mortgage without equity nor sanity.