Income and Credit Debt of Private Households

Abstract This article describes the development of the needs-weighted net household income of persons in private households in Germany since the year 2000. It also focuses on the presentation of the prevalence and amount of credit debts of private households. The central result is that the share of...

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Main Authors: Markus M. Grabka, Berenike Bartz
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Sciendo 2022-03-01
Series:Wirtschaftsdienst
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-022-3129-0
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author Markus M. Grabka
Berenike Bartz
author_facet Markus M. Grabka
Berenike Bartz
author_sort Markus M. Grabka
collection DOAJ
description Abstract This article describes the development of the needs-weighted net household income of persons in private households in Germany since the year 2000. It also focuses on the presentation of the prevalence and amount of credit debts of private households. The central result is that the share of repayments for loans in Germany has been declining overall since 2000. In particular, the share of households that spend more than 30 % of their household net income on loan repayments has halved over the last 20 years. Despite this overall positive development, there is a risk that the problem of over-indebtedness in Germany could increase again since on the one hand, many self-employed people have suffered high turnover losses due to the containment measures of the coronavirus pandemic, while on the other, the ECB could raise nominal interest rates due to tightened inflation, which would lead to a considerable financial burden for indebted households.
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issn 1613-978X
language deu
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series Wirtschaftsdienst
spelling doaj-art-2f59cbf335984ca3990597d7b357878e2025-02-03T02:56:46ZdeuSciendoWirtschaftsdienst1613-978X2022-03-01102317518010.1007/s10273-022-3129-0Income and Credit Debt of Private HouseholdsMarkus M. Grabka0Berenike Bartz1SOEP, Deutsches Institut für WirtschaftsforschungSOEP, Deutsches Institut für WirtschaftsforschungAbstract This article describes the development of the needs-weighted net household income of persons in private households in Germany since the year 2000. It also focuses on the presentation of the prevalence and amount of credit debts of private households. The central result is that the share of repayments for loans in Germany has been declining overall since 2000. In particular, the share of households that spend more than 30 % of their household net income on loan repayments has halved over the last 20 years. Despite this overall positive development, there is a risk that the problem of over-indebtedness in Germany could increase again since on the one hand, many self-employed people have suffered high turnover losses due to the containment measures of the coronavirus pandemic, while on the other, the ECB could raise nominal interest rates due to tightened inflation, which would lead to a considerable financial burden for indebted households.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-022-3129-0
spellingShingle Markus M. Grabka
Berenike Bartz
Income and Credit Debt of Private Households
Wirtschaftsdienst
title Income and Credit Debt of Private Households
title_full Income and Credit Debt of Private Households
title_fullStr Income and Credit Debt of Private Households
title_full_unstemmed Income and Credit Debt of Private Households
title_short Income and Credit Debt of Private Households
title_sort income and credit debt of private households
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-022-3129-0
work_keys_str_mv AT markusmgrabka incomeandcreditdebtofprivatehouseholds
AT berenikebartz incomeandcreditdebtofprivatehouseholds