Borrowers who have fallen behind on their payments are increasingly relying on debt settlement to restructure their credit profiles
For Santosh L, it all started innocuously enough. The 40-year-old techie took his first set of loans to buy a television, a fridge and an air conditioner. The monthly payments were affordable and as a salaried employee with an MNC he was baited with new loan offers every day.
The loan offers came with varied names—from 0 percent EMI and personal loans, to buy-now-pay-later and overdraft facilities. But, in effect, they were all shoving credit at India’s middle-class borrowers, who are among the most unleveraged cohort in the world.
According to data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), unsecured loans for consumption have shown rapid growth over the last decade. In the year ended February 2023, credit card outstanding rose 29 percent to Rs186,000 crore and consumer durable loans were up 39 percent to Rs37,000 crore, according to data from the central bank.
Contrast this with a 7 percent growth rate for loans to industry and it is not hard to see why banks, non-banks and fintechs have rushed to build their loan books on this cohort.
Santosh’s credit was good, and banks and fintechs were flush with funds to build their loan books; he could take his pick of loan offers. At last count Santosh, who now earns Rs30 lakh a year, had seven credit cards, four digital loans and one personal loan against his name.