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Tuesday, June 17, 2025

The benefits of using a credit card

by

Curtis Williams
2028 days ago
20191126

In my last col­umn I promised that we would look at cred­it cards. I am now back from va­ca­tion. I spent the last three weeks hik­ing in the An­na­pur­na Moun­tains in Nepal. It was an amaz­ing and chal­leng­ing ex­pe­ri­ence and I am very hap­py to be back. The trip and the ex­pe­ri­ence in the moun­tains al­lows me to re­al­ly ap­pre­ci­ate and be thank­ful for all that we have here in Trin­ba­go, in­clud­ing cred­it cards. You see, Nepal is heav­i­ly cash and pa­per based. I had to car­ry lots of cash with me in the moun­tains or I would have starved. The con­ve­nience of hav­ing a cred­it card avail­able both for the buy­er and the sell­er can­not be un­der­es­ti­mat­ed.

A cred­it card is is­sued to card­hold­ers to en­able them to pay mer­chants ac­cept­ing the cards for goods and ser­vices. The bank cre­ates a re­volv­ing ac­count and grants a line of cred­it to the card­hold­er. When the card­hold­er us­es the card the bank pays the mer­chant less any fees and charges and the card­hold­er pays the bank lat­er on.

A cred­it card is dif­fer­ent from deb­it card be­cause the card hold­er is spend­ing his own mon­ey and not tak­ing an ad­vance from the bank. When the card hold­er us­es her deb­it card the bank pays the mer­chant and takes the mon­ey out of her ac­count.

The main ben­e­fit to the card­hold­er is con­ve­nience. This is what I re­al­ly missed while hik­ing. Com­pared to deb­it cards and checks, a cred­it card al­lows small short-term loans to be quick­ly made to a card­hold­er who need not cal­cu­late a bal­ance re­main­ing be­fore every trans­ac­tion once they do not ex­ceed the cred­it card lim­it.

Many cred­it cards of­fer re­wards and ben­e­fits pack­ages.

As Sethi notes “cred­it cards give you thou­sands of dol­lars’ worth of perks. If you pay your bill on time, they’re a free short-term loan. They can help you keep track of your spend­ing much more eas­i­ly than cash, and they let you down­load your trans­ac­tion his­to­ry for free.

“Most of­fer free war­ran­ty ex­ten­sions on your pur­chas­es and free rental car in­sur­ance. Many al­so of­fer re­wards and points worth hun­dreds or even thou­sands of dol­lars.”

For mer­chants, a cred­it card trans­ac­tion is of­ten more se­cure than oth­er forms of pay­ment, such as cheques, be­cause the is­su­ing bank com­mits to pay the mer­chant the mo­ment the trans­ac­tion is au­tho­rised, re­gard­less of whether the con­sumer de­faults on the cred­it card pay­ment.

In most cas­es, cards are even more se­cure than cash, be­cause they dis­cour­age theft by the mer­chant’s em­ploy­ees and re­duce the amount of cash on the premis­es.

Fi­nal­ly, cred­it cards re­duce the back of­fice ex­pense of pro­cess­ing checks/cash and trans­port­ing them to the bank.

Pri­or to cred­it cards, each mer­chant had to eval­u­ate cus­tomers’ cred­it wor­thi­ness be­fore ex­tend­ing cred­it. That task is now per­formed by the banks which as­sume the cred­it risk.

Cred­it cards can al­so aid in se­cur­ing a sale es­pe­cial­ly if the cus­tomer does not have enough cash on hand or in a check­ing ac­count.

Ad­di­tion­al sales are gen­er­at­ed by the fact that the cus­tomer can pur­chase goods and ser­vices im­me­di­ate­ly and is less in­hib­it­ed by the amount of cash on hand or in their bank ac­count.

Mer­chants are charged sev­er­al fees for ac­cept­ing cred­it cards, in­clud­ing a com­mis­sion of around one per cent to four per cent of the val­ue of each trans­ac­tion.

In some cas­es mer­chants may charge users a cred­it card sur­charge, ei­ther a fixed amount or a per­cent­age, for pay­ment by cred­it card. This was the case in the big­ger cities in Nepal, where we were ad­vised that any pay­ment by cred­it card in­creased the amount payable by four per cent.

Thank­ful­ly, this is not usu­al­ly the case in Trin­ba­go.

I am de­scribed as a “trans­ac­tor”, which means that I pay off my cred­it card in full every month. There­fore, I earn all the ben­e­fits with­out pay­ing any in­ter­est or in­cur­ring any fees and charges.

The al­ter­na­tive are “re­volvers”, those card­hold­ers who ac­tu­al­ly bor­row us­ing cred­it cards.

Next week we will look at why this is NOT a good idea.

As usu­al, I look for­ward to your ques­tions and com­ments. Please send them to me at smart­moneytt@gmail.com. Take good care.


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