Tuesday, March 31, 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

    Ottawa closes sale of Canadian Wheat Board, name changes to G3 Canada Ltd.

    Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz says Ottawa has finalized the sale of the agency that marketed grain for western Canadian farmers since 1935 to G3 Global Grain Group.

    Ottawa closes sale of Canadian Wheat Board, name changes to G3 Canada Ltd.

    Police Search For Bryce Gray,17-Year-Old Boater, Last Seen Near Burns Lake

    Police Search For Bryce Gray,17-Year-Old Boater, Last Seen Near Burns Lake
    Bryce Gray's boat was found empty on the shore of Tchesinkut Lake early Wednesday morning, and the boat motor was missing

    Police Search For Bryce Gray,17-Year-Old Boater, Last Seen Near Burns Lake

    Coroner, Police Identify B.C. Man Two Decades After He Died In Victoria

    Kenneth Boseley's name was not known when he died at the age of 35 in October 1994, and subsequent genetic attempts to identify the man failed.

    Coroner, Police Identify B.C. Man Two Decades After He Died In Victoria

    Police Issued More Than 1,700 Tickets Over Improper Use Of Pan Am HOV Lanes

    Police Issued More Than 1,700 Tickets Over Improper Use Of Pan Am HOV Lanes
    TORONTO — Officers patrolling Toronto-area highways handed out 1,735 tickets for improper use of the controversial temporary high-occupancy lanes set up on for the Pan Am Games, police said Thursday.

    Police Issued More Than 1,700 Tickets Over Improper Use Of Pan Am HOV Lanes

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer
    EDMONTON — There appears to be a Canadian connection to a U.S. hunter at the centre of a social media storm for killing a protected lion in Africa.

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer

    Drought Prompts B.C. First Nations Group To Close Central Interior Fishery

    Drought Prompts B.C. First Nations Group To Close Central Interior Fishery
    KELOWNA, B.C. — Drought conditions in British Columbia have forced the closure of another fishery in the province's southern Interior.

    Drought Prompts B.C. First Nations Group To Close Central Interior Fishery