Learning About Mis-Used Credit and Soul Destroying Debt While Down in the Deeps

I tend to think of credit and debt problems as a modern invention brought about largely by credit cards. It took a trip down a coal mine in Cape Breton to remind me that misuse of credit leading to soul-destroying debt is actually a very old problem.

Learning About Credit from a Man of the Deeps

For those of you who have watched a Rita MacNeil Christmas Special on CBC, this explanation will be unnecessary. But for the iPod generation, I will explain the Men of the Deeps is a group of male singers who all worked previously in the coal mines in Cape Breton.

I’m not sure whether the retired miner who led our tour of a coal mine in Glace Bay has ever sung or not but he definitely did work in the Deeps. He was the son of a miner and the grandson of two miners, one of whom died when the coal face he was cutting collapsed onto him. So when he spoke of the old days of mining he drew on personal experience.

Can’t Afford It? Don’t Worry You Can Buy It On Credit!

Our guide explained how the mining companies got and kept the men who would do this dirty dangerous life-threatening work. The trick was the way the company offered and used (or mis-used) credit.

Many of the first miners were lured here by golden-tongued tales in Britain and Europe of the guarantee of work and a house to live in. If the recruits didn’t have money for the fare on a steamship, the company would even loan them the $50—if they signed a work contract and agreed to re-pay the money over time.

Once here, the new workers found themselves in isolated communities where everything belonged to the mining company. All of the houses, the heating fuel, the water, and if there was any, the electricity, was provided, for a price, by the owners of the mine.

There was a store, too, with everything you could imagine for sale from simple food and clothes to luxurious high-priced items like cameras and porcelain dolls. Guess who owned the store? the only store?

Indebted Forever

The mining companies were happy to extend credit to the men who worked for them. That was the catch, though. They only allowed loans to those they employed. So if you wanted to quit, you had to pay all you owed, immediately, to the company. Most men couldn’t afford to do that. So they were stuck working in the mines, even if they feared and hated it.

Our guide also said that he believed that the mining companies gave the worst most dangerous jobs on the shift to those with the highest debts: those were the men who literally couldn’t afford to object or quit.

It’s Hard to Say “No” to Free Stuff

The company stores made it very easy to get into debt. Imagine the weeks leading up to a major holiday like Christmas or a special occasion like a birthday. Hopeful children and adults would look at the expensive, enticing items on offer at the store: leather ice skates with attached blades, Kodak Brownie cameras, phonographs, sewing machines, porcelain head dolls with fancy clothes.

It would have been easy for the miners to say “No” to these attractive goods if they had had to hand over a carefully saved wad of cash. But they didn’t have to spend a cent. The company would let them have the present of their child’s dreams and just put it on their bill.
And so they would end up farther in debt. Misuse of credit can be crippling.

Unions and Development Saved the Miners from the Credit Debt Death Spiral

Eventually through the work of the unions to improve working conditions in the mines, pay, and living conditions above ground, miners broke free of the credit/debt cycle. When they could build a home of their own, shop from non-company-owned stores like Eaton’s, and fuel their home with firewood, the miners could start to earn more than enough to service their debts.

What Will Save Us from Credit Card Debt?

Does this mean someday we will find a solution to the lure of credit card debt? Higher wages alone won’t solve that problem as the credit card issuers will just offer higher credit limits to encourage more over-spending. It’s unlikely that governments will intervene to impose limits on the amount of credit a consumer can have.

Perhaps the solution will develop when enough people demand changes to the credit issuing and usage system to prevent misuse of credit. I don’t really know.

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Do you think modern-day credit card debt holders are significantly different from those miners trapped in a cycle of credit, debt and work? Please share your opinions with a comment.

2 thoughts on “Learning About Mis-Used Credit and Soul Destroying Debt While Down in the Deeps

  1. Credit cards are not like selling your soul to the company store because no one makes you charge your new tv, car repair or dinner out on the credit card. Credit cards are a choice – a poor choice. I owe about $1,000 on my Visa right now because I failed to plan for life’s little emergencies.

    Those pay advance companies that charge high interest and frequent penalties seem to trap people and are more like the old company store.

    • True!

      I just find it interesting that credit card companies are happy to increase limits for customers who run up large balances and don’t pay them back immediately. And that they are happy to issue 0%-interest-for-a-limited-time cards to people with large debt, because they want to get them on their brand so the interest payments will eventually come to them. (People who pay their balances every month aren’t all that interested in 0% cards as they always pay 0%.)

      Sorry to hear you’ve had a minor setback. Try not to be too hard on yourself: It’s not like you spent the money on a $1000 handbag made by someone who was paid $5!

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