In America, Why the Poor Pay $4,158 For a $1,500 ‘Rent-to-Own’ Sofa

MidwestD

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http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/in-america-why-the-poor-pay-dollar4158-for-a-dollar1500-‘rent-to-own’-sofa/ar-BB9w32K

© The Washington Post
CULLMAN, Ala. — The love seat and sofa that Jamie Abbott can’t quite afford ended up in her double-wide trailer because of the day earlier this year when she and her family walked into a new store called Buddy’s. Abbott had no access to credit, no bank account and little cash, but here was a place that catered to exactly those kinds of customers. Anything could be hers. The possibilities — and the prices — were dizzying.

At Buddy’s, a used 32-gigabyte, early model iPad costs $1,439.28, paid over 72 weeks. An Acer laptop: $1,943.28, in 72 weekly installments. A Maytag washer and dryer: $1,999 over 100 weeks.

Abbott wanted a love seat-sofa combo, and she knew it might rip her budget. But this, she figured, was the cost of being out of options. “You don’t get something like that just to put more burden on yourself,” Abbott said.

Five years into a national economic recovery that has further strained the poor working class, an entire industry has grown around handing them a lifeline to the material rewards of middle-class life. Retailers in the post-Great Recession years have become even more likely to work with customers who don’t have the money upfront, instead offering a widening spectrum of payment plans that ultimately cost far more and add to the burdens of life on the economy’s fringes.

The poor today can shop online, paying in installments, or walk into traditional retailers such as Kmart that now offer in-store leasing. The most striking change in the world of low-income commerce has been the proliferation of rent-to-own stores such as Buddy’s Home Furnishings, which has been opening a new store every week, largely in the South.

In some ways, the business harkens back to the subprime boom of the early 2000s, when lenders handed out loans to low-income borrowers with little credit history. But while people in those days were charged perhaps an interest rate of 5 to 10 percent, at rental centers the poor find themselves paying effective annual interest rates of more than 100 percent. With business models such as “rent-to-own,” in which transactions are categorized as leases, stores like Buddy’s can avoid state usury laws and other regulations.

And yet low-income Americans increasingly have few other places to turn. “Congratulations, You are Pre-Approved,” Buddy’s says on its Web site, and the message plays to America’s bottom 40 percent. This is a group that makes less money than it did 20 years ago, a group increasingly likely to string together paychecks by holding multiple part-time jobs with variable hours.

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Article is a LONG read, so I only posted the first few paragraphs here. Let's discuss these "rent to own" stores taking advantage of poor people who want a taste of that middle class life, brehs
 

gho3st

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i agree, has America become so fukked up that sofas lead to financial ruin? We GOTTA do better than this.
dont know if you trolling or not but its not that simple. Most of the people who frequent these stores probably got rent, utility bill, cable bill, internet(if they have kids), gas and grocery to account for. Once you add that up, the small payment almost seem like a bargain since they can "afford" it.
 
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its predatory but furnishing an apt is expensive.

I just furnished a small 1 bedroom and spent $1500 easy with decent furniture and im not even done.

Imagine a family.

Alot of people dont have that kind of cash just laying around

They can always just go to the salvation army or something, thats what my mom did when times were tight:yeshrug:
 

MidwestD

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On one hand, if you're poor you probably shouldn't be buying iPads/laptops/high-end electronics etc.

On the other, predatory lending practices are some of the most evil demonic schemes ever created :demonic:

i agree 100% w. the bolded, but gotta disagree on the other. Just to be competitive in the job market in 2014 you gotta have a laptop. Every job I've had
since 2005 I've got by applying/sending a resume online. Local newspapers only advertise a small fraction of the employment that's out there.
 

Takerstani

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Some people have no concept of delayed gratification. I see people buying OLD computers for multiple times what they're worth. Then, by the time they finish paying it off, it's completely obsolete. I say, "just save up for 3 months and just buy a new one outright with updated specifications", and I get, "I don't want to wait!"

Let them pay that, they don't want to be saved. Everything isn't a matter of manipulation. It's the same reason you pay more for ketchup at 7-11, you're not just paying for ketchup but the convenience because it's easy to run up there to get it rather than going to the store. Perpetual victims instead of going to the grocery store and paying regular price, would rather pass the buck and lobby for legislature to stop 7-11s from selling overpriced ketchup.
 
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Truth200

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It is predatory, but the entire economic system is predatory. People need to be educated to avoid these traps as much as possible and have the discipline to not get caught up in buying things that they can't really afford.

Well said....
 
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