TORONTO
— Canadians are paying off their debts faster, with the number of those more
than three months behind on loan payments dropping to a record low, according
to a report Thursday from Equifax Canada.
The
latest National Credits Trends study by the credit monitoring firm found that
the percentage of unpaid non-mortgage debt past-due more than 90 days was 1.19%
in the fourth quarter of 2012, a slight decrease from 1.22% in the third
quarter.
Nadim
Abdo, Equifax’s vice-president of consulting solutions, says these rates have
been declining since the pre-recession level in 2007 when it was at 1.75%.
“Part
of it I would attribute to people looking after their credit and not taking on
too much credit,” he said. “Credit has become very important for consumers in
general. There is more awareness, I would say, then there was before.”
The
study, which is released each quarter, also found that average credit card
balances have dropped by 3.7% compared with the July-September quarter — a sign
that people may be trying to pay these off quicker than before.
Despite
this, the study also saw an increase of 3.2% on non-mortgage loans, including
bank loans, lines of credit, car leases and credit cards in the
October-December period, up from a 1.8% increase in the previous quarter.
Equifax
said that suggested that Canadian non-mortgage debt totalled $497.4 billion in
the fourth quarter, up from $489 billion in the third quarter.
The
firm says it found that fewer consumers applied for new loans in the latest
quarter, but rather made do with the loans they already had.
And
it found an 11% decline in new credit applications, compared with pre-recession
levels.
This
shows that consumers are learning more control over their credit and debt
levels, Abdo said.
“People
are (being) financially responsible,” he said. “They have the facilities and
they’re just using them, versus just going crazy and getting those 25 credit
cards like we used to back in the heyday.”
Abdo
also said he expected the drop in loan balances and loan defaults to continue
if the economy remains stable.
In
previous years, he says Equifax studies have shown that consumers tend to take
out more loans, and do not pay them back as quickly, during a volatile economy
or periods of high unemployment.
Meanwhile,
the Bank of Canada on Tuesday downgraded its economic growth outlook for the
country to 1.9% for 2012 and to 2% for 2013, both three-tenths of a point lower
than previously forecast.
The
central bank says as a result, interest rates will be kept lower for longer due
to the weak economy.
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