Comment on I got that dept in me
LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee 1 week agoas long as you can comfortably afford it
Functionally, there’s not a whole lot of difference between splitting it into 4 125$ payments on your paychecks, or stashing 125$ from each paycheck to savings.
There is, though. Spending the $500 you have in savings is an even exchange. Money for goods/services.
Spending money you don’t have through BNPL means you’re exchanging a ‘promise to pay’ or an IOU for goods and services. What happens if you don’t pay on time? How much more than the actual purchase price will it cost?
cm0002@lemmy.world 1 week ago
My comment has nothing to do with who they target, just how you can properly take advantage of said service.
You need to re-read my comment again, I covered that already
As far as what happens if you don’t pay, well, the exact same thing that happens when you don’t make payments on any other type of credit
Except it’s better than other predatory practices such as “Title Loans” because it’s unsecured. So worst case scenario, your credit gets dinged for a while and you got to deal with debt collectors. That’s a far cry from having your car repossessed or foreclosed on your home
LilB0kChoy@lemm.ee 1 week ago
This will be my last response to you, you clearly didn’t even read the articles I linked. Who BNPL targets is directly related to the part of your original comment I replied to and the conventional wisdom of not spending money you don’t have. Here’s the relevant information from the article:
You want to talk about “how you can properly take advantage of said service” but in your example the only way to take advantage is if you already have the money. Spending money in a BNPL scheme when you don’t increases your risk exponentially and one missed payment, one default, can follow you on your credit for years. This is why it’s both relevant who BNPL is targeted towards and why “not spending money you don’t have” is the best advice to give anyone about ANY credit scheme.