Burritos on a payment plan, explained.You’ve probably noticed it by now: You’re shopping online for some makeup or a new pair of running shoes or a water table for your toddler, and when you go to check out, you have a new option — why not break up the cost into four payments, made over time?US consumers, especially Gen Z and millennial ones, have been embracing “buy now, pay later” services like Klarna and Afterpay with gusto the last few years. It’s not hard to see the attraction: Unlike a credit card, most BNPL plans don’t carry interest, and they generally don’t impact your credit score (though that is now changing).On social media people tout BNPL as a way to buy stuff you want but don’t have the cash for right then — or maybe ever. And that’s starting to show up in the data: Leading BNPL company Klarna — which recently partnered with the food delivery service DoorDash, spawning a thousand memes — saw its net losses from consumers not paying their loans more than double in the first quarter of this year.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @SimpleStacker 30 Jun
People talk so much about the plight of Gen Z, but I actually know quite a few Gen Z from serving on college ministry in my church. I can't say I know 100% all their financial situations, but the stereotypes you read about in the media don't seem to ring true for me, so I'm wondering who are the Gen Z that these articles talk about. I certainly don't know anyone who uses BNPL.
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @BTC_Bellzer 29 Jun
BNPL is going to absolutely wreck a generation
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @0xbitcoiner OP 29 Jun
I'd say people are going to wreck the generation, not the tool!
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