Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canadians Get Better At Making Consumer Debt Payments On Time: TransUnion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2015 12:58 PM
    TORONTO — Credit monitoring agency TransUnion says Canadians appear to be getting better at handling consumer debt.
     
    In its latest report, TransUnion says a shrinking percentage of debt payments are overdue by 90 days or more — even though the average balance owing continues to rise.
     
    It says there was an overall delinquency rate of 2.58 per cent on non-mortgage consumer debts in the second quarter.
     
    That was down from a delinquency rate of 2.78 per cent in the second quarter of 2013 and 2.69 per cent in 2014.
     
    TransUnion's average consumer debt number rose to $21,028 in the three months ended June 30, about $148 higher than in the second quarter of 2014.
     
     
    Lines of credit accounted for 35 per cent of all non-mortgage consumer debt, which also includes credit cards and car loans.
     
    TransUnion's director of research and analysis, Jason Wang, says the trends show Canadians are increasingly aware of the importance of making payments on time and that they have the capacity to do so.
     
    "The recent interest rate cuts may have, in part, made it easier to manage lines of credit, which typically carry variable rates," Wang said in a statement.
     
    The Bank of Canada has cut a key rate twice this year — to 0.75 per cent in January and to 0.50 per cent in July — and commercial lenders followed the central bank's lead by dropping their variable rates.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No Punishment For Winnipeg Police Officers Who Broadcast Sex Chat From Chopper

    No Punishment For Winnipeg Police Officers Who Broadcast Sex Chat From Chopper
    Winnipeg police say there will be no disciplinary action taken against two officers in a helicopter whose explicit conversation, including swearing and references to oral sex, was broadcast by loudspeaker to people below.

    No Punishment For Winnipeg Police Officers Who Broadcast Sex Chat From Chopper

    NDP Uses Mother's Child Care Benefit Donation As Fundraising Tool

    NDP Uses Mother's Child Care Benefit Donation As Fundraising Tool
    OTTAWA — The federal NDP seems to be encouraging parents who don't need the newly enhanced universal child care benefit to donate the money to the party.

    NDP Uses Mother's Child Care Benefit Donation As Fundraising Tool

    Special Investigations Unit Probes Fatal Shooting Involving Toronto Police

    The SIU says in a release that a 21-year-old man was shot during an "interaction" with police after officers approached a vehicle about 2 a.m.

    Special Investigations Unit Probes Fatal Shooting Involving Toronto Police

    Dawson Lacroix, Toddler Reported Missing In Southern Quebec Found Dead After Intensive Search

    Dawson Lacroix, Toddler Reported Missing In Southern Quebec Found Dead After Intensive Search
    WATERLOO, Que. — A two-year-old child who went missing Friday evening in the town of Waterloo in southern Quebec was found dead later that night.

    Dawson Lacroix, Toddler Reported Missing In Southern Quebec Found Dead After Intensive Search

    Drugs Including Morphine Seized Within Maximum Security Donnacona, Que., Prison

    Drugs Including Morphine Seized Within Maximum Security Donnacona, Que., Prison
    DONNACONA, Que. — Guards at the maximum-security Donnacona penitentiary seized a large stash of drugs, including morphine, within the Quebec City-area prison this week.

    Drugs Including Morphine Seized Within Maximum Security Donnacona, Que., Prison

    Federal Government 'Well Ahead' On Path To Surplus, PM Harper Says

    Federal Government 'Well Ahead' On Path To Surplus, PM Harper Says
    And while Finance Minister Joe Oliver didn’t respond to a call from the Liberals to prove his projections for a small surplus are intact, Harper insisted his government’s balanced budget pledge isn’t merely an election-year fairy tale.

    Federal Government 'Well Ahead' On Path To Surplus, PM Harper Says