I always assumed credit scores were an integral and historic part of the American financial system.

They were not, they are very recent,most of your parents didn’t have credit scores growing up, and as you can probably tell or at least intuit, it’s mostly just a b******* scheme for those with capital to accrue more capital by invading your privacy.

  • cum@lemmy.cafe
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    5 months ago

    Lol this is such a load of bs being taken at face value. No, having credit cards in Norway isn’t bad. They judge your rating by your debt, and responsible credit card usage does not create debt. This reads like it’s written by someone who doesn’t understand how credit works, regardless of country.

    • Dozzi92@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I have to imagine credit ratings are fairly ubiquitous, since banking is international, and who’s giving the money out? Would make no sense to penalize someone for having a lot of available credit. Maybe if you have 10 cards with low available credit, and they’re all maxed out and you’re just paying minimums, that’s bad. That’s bad in America too. Amount of available credit less amount of credit used seems to be a big factor.

    • nem@sopuli.xyz
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      5 months ago

      Not sure if you misunderstood the post. What they write is how it works in Norway. If you have two credit cards with 50k credit limit each, then that count as 100k debt when the bank calculates your ability to pay off a loan, it doesnt matter if you haven’t used them.