And more than other CCs charge. It's a bit of a different thing than a CC because of the fixed fees, so for some items it can make sense, but for many of the items I've seen people putting on layaway, the annualized rates are pretty steep.
No, but that wasn't what I really had in mind.
I don't think it has to do with saving people money on imputed interest costs, though. What are the minimums? $50? $75?
Agreed, and these are the people that I had in mind with my comment, and there are people that spend every penny and then stick a $50 or $100 item on layaway.
Oh no doubt about that, and I'm not by any stretch opposed to stores having layaway programs. Buyer beware.
It has been so long since I put anything on layaway I have forgotten how it worked then and have questions about it today.
20+ years ago IIRC for layaways I would head for the store and buy everything at once. I had my list in hand and would spent $300.00 total. Often I would find an item that was being gobbled up and want to insure that item was sold to me.
My problem was I had one of those rotten kids that would search the house night and day to discover what they and their 3 siblings were going to get, then TELL them. We would find a neighbor with no kids their age and request they stored the kids presents at their place when we collected them after final payment.
I have become most sad at the state of affairs with the whole Christmass gift thing, All this came to a head one year long ago when I took a good look at how this has evolved to the mess it is today.
I now only buy for MY kids, the grandkids have family to buy for them. I Buy for Mom, 4 kids and Hubby, that's it.
Truthfully, I cannot remember one gift in my life that my grandparents bought or made for me, only a few my parents gave me.
Layaway is now about the only way people living check to check can give their kids even just one present that is expensive. Those on welfare get the community help from Toys for Tots to the Stores that get donations for children in poor homes.
Stocking stuffers for the grandkids are new tooth brushes, socks, hair products and pajamas.
Call me a mean old lady but I have see kids on Christmass morning wildly opening their gifts only to throw them down, trample them to get to the next package. By the end of the day half the presents are broken and discarded.
Children are taught that they get something for nothing, no idea what Christmass is all about. Adults give guilt gifts ---that's what I call them---.
All ways bothered me that my Mom who gave a large chunk of her estate to a family member to make a down payment for their home received--- 4 store bought cookies for Christmass. Nicely wrapped, but really a pair of warm socks would have been a nice gesture.
Everyone makes out a list of what they want for Christmass, but few kids over the age of 8 make out a list of what they want to give others, be it home made gifts, Mow the lawn for grandpa, spend allowance on a bag of candy for their siblings, this is where the entitlement begins.
My Birthday is early December, I got money as a teenager, I did gripe that my birthday money was spent for Christmass gifts for the family. However it was fun looking back on the amazement of the family adults to get a gift in return.