The History of Credit Cards

Via Visual Capitalist

Today, credit cards are one of the most important sources of big bank profits. However, a look at the history of credit cards shows that things weren’t always that way.

While it may seem today that credit is impersonal and calculated, credit was once a privilege built around personal trust and long-lasting relationships. In the late 19th century, stores began offering credit to their best and most trustworthy customers. Instead of paying each time they visited the shop, a regular could defer payments to the future by using store-issued metal coins or plates that had their account number engraved. Shops would record the purchase details, and add the cost of the item bought to the customer’s balance owed.

By the 1920s, shops started issuing paper cards instead of metal plates, but even these became cumbersome. Consumers had to hold different cards for each shop, and this made the sector ripe for disruption.

Diners Club, the first independent credit card company in the world, did just that in the 1950s. Their cards allowed people to make travel and entertainment purchases, even with different vendors.

Bank of America took this idea and ran with it, forever changing the history of credit cards. They launched the “BankAmericard” in Fresno, California, by sending it out to all 60,000 residents at once. Soon all consumers and vendors in the city were using the same card, and the concept of mass-mailing cards to the public spread like a wildfire.

After these risky mass mailings of credit cards eventually culminated in the Chicago Debacle of 1966, they were outlawed in the 1970s for causing “financial chaos”. With no applications required, many people including compulsive debtors, crooks, and narcotics addicts were able to receive easy credit. By the time such mass airdrops became illegal, 100 million cards had already been unleashed on the U.S. population without a need for an application.

In 1976, the BankAmericard system eventually became Visa. It was soon after this point that credit cards would enter their golden age for banks: as savings rates fell in the early 1980s, the interest rates on debt did not. Credit cards became a “cash cow”, and they’ve been a key source of bank profits ever since.

Today, 80% of U.S. households own multiple cards, and they account for just under $1 trillion of consumer debt.


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11 Comments
Ed
Ed
April 13, 2016 12:52 pm

I suppose I’m showing my age when I reveal that Carte Blanche was my first credit card.

Suzanna
Suzanna
April 13, 2016 1:02 pm

Ha! The money machine for the banks. Credit cards.

Got my first one unsolicited, master card, after graduating college.
Barely used it. Then a kindly shopkeeper took me aside and told
me all the data on my checks (phone # also) could be used by
criminals, etc. warned me, so to speak.

Gradually, I became accustomed to using the card. Just subtracted
the purchase from balance in the check book. (The bill comes and
you have the $ to pay set aside.) Easy. My lack of sophistication
knows no bounds, reveal? I never used an ATM. I recently got the
required debit card, but have yet to use it. Mr. will teach me. Then,
I will get cash out of the bank, sans the wry/suspicious looks from
the teller. BTW, I never paid a late or interest payment. Motto:
Live below your means.

rhs jr
rhs jr
April 13, 2016 1:08 pm

Discover took the side of a crooked business that double billed me so I make my card zero every month. The video didn’t mention that TPTB plan to eliminate cash and transition us to e-money and something like a chip in the hand so they can make us their financial cattle.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
April 13, 2016 1:54 pm

Why is it that credit cards are still charging double digit interest rates when all the savings rates are near zero?

Ed
Ed
April 13, 2016 2:32 pm

Amazon solicited me via email for “their” Visa. Interest was 21%. Instant approval! Such a deal! uuuhhhh…no, thenk yewwww.

Didius Julianus
Didius Julianus
April 13, 2016 2:33 pm

How many will voluntarily get chipped when that is pushed? More than I hope to believe, I think. “Forgive them Lord for they know not what they do.” Except those who receive the mark will not be forgiven,

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 13, 2016 3:51 pm

ED,

You never had a Diners Club card?

Rise Up
Rise Up
April 13, 2016 7:05 pm

When we all get “lowjacked”, identity theft will be via scalpel.

Ed
Ed
April 13, 2016 7:38 pm

No Diner’s Club. It was my first business and the bank suggested Carte Blanche. I kinda liked the French name.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
April 14, 2016 5:21 am

Westcoaster says:
“Why is it that credit cards are still charging double digit interest rates when all the savings rates are near zero?”

Does anyone wonder why Westie can’t answer the question for himself?

Let’s go to Michael Savage for the answer…..he even wrote a book about it:

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