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UK Petrol
prices: Rising costs forcing motorists to borrow from payday loans to
keep on road
According
to a study, a sixth are forced to take out payday loans, pawn prized
possessions, go overdrawn or dig into savings
6
September, 2013
Soaring
petrol prices are driving hard-up motorists into the clutches of
extortionate payday loan companies, the AA warns today.
It
found one in six car owners, hammered by four petrol price spikes in
the last 18 months, are going into the red.
According
to the study, a sixth are forced to take out payday loans, pawn
prized possessions, go overdrawn or dig into savings to top up the
tank.
With
pump prices hitting an 11 month high of 140.3 a litre in March and
still at 138p a litre today, drivers are having to stump up an extra
£5 for a small tank of fuel.
A
fifth admitted their household budgets are at breaking point because
of petrol prices, rising to third of those in low paid, unskilled
jobs.
Young
drivers aged 18-24 are the most likely to fall into a payday loan
spiral of debt and one 19-year-old told a Yahoo! internet forum how
he owes money to several lenders because of his petrol bills.
The
teenager said: “I’ve dropped out of uni and managed to find a job
however I was using over £500 petrol a month in my new job.
“I
had no money to put fuel in my car at the start of my first month and
ended up taking out a pay day loan with 2/3 lenders. It’s really
spiraled out of control and I’m just so depressed and anxious all
the time.”
AA
president Edmund King said: “Young drivers with little capital to
fall back on and who are likely to be on lower pay scales are clearly
suffering the most - one in 50 of them have put themselves in real
financial danger by taking out a payday loan. But, they are not
alone.”
For
the survey also found one in 50 in the 35-44 age group are also
turning to crippling, high-interest lenders to make ends meet.
“These
drivers are probably saddled with family costs and mortgages or high
rents, and their predicament is even more disturbing,” said Mr
King.
“Fuel
price desperation has created a new and sinister twist to the phrase
‘driven into debt’.”
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