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Condemning credit in 1969

Broadcast Date: Jan. 1, 1969

In theory, credit is a boon to consumers, a way to make goods and services more accessible to people who don't always have the cash immediately available. The reality in 1970 is that credit often makes it too easy to get these things, and this easy credit is a disaster for many Canadians. Guests in this episode of Concern criticize the lures of easy purchasing and the seductive marketing that sucked them into ruinous debt, including one guest whose marriage collapsed under the pressure of their debt. How does it happen? Who's to blame? Concern explores the credit system in search of answers.

Condemning credit in 1969

• The credit card concept is first attributed to American authour Edward Bellamy, who coined the term in his 1887 book Looking Backward: 2000-1887. The novel details the story of a young Boston man who goes to sleep for 113 years and wakes up in 2000, when the U.S. has developed into an economic utopia. In the book, the card is worth a certain amount of money which decreases as the card is used, making it more the modern equivalent of a debit card.

• The credit card was born in 1949 when businessman Frank McNamara hosted a dinner at a New York City restaurant, but upon receiving the bill, realized he'd forgotten his wallet. After his wife picked up the tab, the embarrassed McNamara vowed never to be caught short again. Soon after, he founded Diner's Club and began distributing credit cards in 1950. Their use was very limited, being accepted in just 14 retaurants in New York City. By 1967, the card was accepted in more countries (130) than were in the United Nations (122). In 1989, LIFE magazine named McNamara one of the 100 most influential Americans of the 20th century.

• The song that host Peter Meggs refers to at the beginning of the program is Sixteen Tons, a famous tune about the travails of coal mining. The chorus grumbles, "You load sixteen tons, and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt. Saint Peter, don't you call me, 'cause I can't go; I owe my soul to the company store. "The song was first recorded by country singer Merle Travis in 1946, but a 1955 rendition by Tennessee Ernie Ford was a far greater success.

Condemning credit in 1969

Medium: Radio

Program: Concern

Broadcast Date: Jan. 1, 1969


Announcer: Bruce Marsh
Host: Peter Meggs
Reporter: Michael John Nimchuk

Duration: 52:07

This clip was edited for copyright reasons.

Photo: ©iStockphoto.com/DNY59

Last updated:
Jan. 30, 2009


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