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The term '''credit crunch''' has been appearing more and more often in the financial press over the past year. Put simply, it is the tightening of available credit. The term '''credit crunch''' has been appearing more and more often in the financial press over the past year. Put simply, it is the tightening of available credit.

Revision as of 17:10, 13 February 2007

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Find sources: "Credit crunch" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (February 2007) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

The term credit crunch has been appearing more and more often in the financial press over the past year. Put simply, it is the tightening of available credit.

Globally at the moment there is a trend in interest rate rises around the world, people may think twice about spending any available debt. Banks may become twitchy about lending to consumers if the risks of defaults increases.

Possible Implications

The credit crunch will feed through all parts of an economy, once people can no longer borrow money to spend on clothes, food, nights out. Whole industries will suffer putting many people out of work.

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