¶ … college campus across the country, students are greeted with the familiar sight of individuals seated at folding tables, with the purpose of marketing credit cards to them. These salespeople are most frequently seen during the beginning of the college semester and are usually young and attractive and smiling, barely older than the students themselves. Quite often, if a student fills out an application for the credit card, he or she may receive a small toy or a gigantic in exchange for his or her pains. What could be more harmless? What's wrong with having a credit card on hand, 'just in case?'
However, this familiar sight is one of the many reasons that college students are becoming more and more deeply ensnared in debt. These smiling individuals prey upon students when they are at their most vulnerable. Most of these students have just had to pay hundreds of dollars for a semester's worth of books. Perhaps they are still looking for a part time job to help out with their tuition bill. These students are the perfect candidates to trust an young individual whom does not seem so different from themselves, who promises them a favorable monthly rate in exchange for their signature. Even the added 'free gift' makes signing for a credit card one is ill-equipped to pay more like something fun, like getting a birthday party goody bag as one did when one was a child, rather than engaging a serious economic decision that could impact one's future life. In fact, one could say, one is signing away one's economic life into a form of indentured servitude or slavery.
Dramatic as this statement may seem, the very concept of credit has strong parallels with both indentured servitude and sharecropping, the economic institutions that preceded and then followed the formal institutionalization of slavery, first in Colonial, then in Reconstruction-era America. In colonial America, indentured servants would be freed of their obligations to their owners after serving for a period of years.
17th century contract for indentured servitude in Virginia stipulates that in return for passage to the New World, the individual would give up seven years of his freedom in the form of unpaid labor to his master. In exchange, after the seven years, his obligation would be settled. The master could also, if he wished, give as the man's 'freedom dues' some land, money, tobacco, and perhaps some tools. (Indentured Servitude Contract in 17th Century Virginia. Stratford Hall History Resource of Historical Documents)
Like a credit card application of today, the man entering a period of indentured servitude was given something -- passage to America -- in exchange for an agreed-upon obligation. He could have no full knowledge of the exact extent of the obligation he would be undertaking over the course of the next seven years. The most popular and the most obvious argument that credit is not a form of slavery is that individuals chose to sign their names willingly to receive credit cards. But merely because someone chooses to do something does not automatically mean the transaction is a fair one. The choice an individual makes must be one of informed consent. In indentured servitude, no informed choice could be made, because the extent of the duties the man owed to his master were not detailed in full. (Indentured Servitude Contract)
Why would an individual embark on such a contract and sell his body and soul into uncertain circumstances for a period of seven years? The answer, quite simply is poverty. Individuals were facing such desperate circumstances at home that they were willing to subject themselves to unspeakably tyrannical masters, in the hopes of making something better of their lives. This is the same logic that individuals use when using credit. "I'm spending money to make money," the unsuspecting student tells him or herself. "Perhaps if I buy that nice new suit on credit, I'll look nice enough to get that part-time job." Or, "I'm buying my textbooks on credit now, but someday I'll be making enough to afford to buy everything in cash and pay everything up at the end of the month -- as soon as I get a great job with my college education." The unsuspecting individual thinks only of the immediate present and the far future, rather than their immediate economic circumstances. The Internet site Student Credit.com actually has a website targeted at high school students. "Credit it a big responsibility," it counsels. However, such counsel seems to fly in the face of the fact that it is specifically encouraging minors to obtain credit cards they are,...
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