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Debt Management

It seems like once a week offers for amazing credit cards--"no annual fees!" "low monthly payments!"--arrive in each Harvard mailbox.

If you've replied, you're not alone.

A full 77 percent of undergraduates at four-year colleges and universities have credit cards, according to data compiled by Consolidated Credit Counseling Services, Inc. (CCCS), a company that helps students with serious debt by securing them lower interest rates, along with credit counseling.

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Credit card companies aren't worrying about reversing the trend. And at college campuses they solicit hard--trying to trap a gnerally conscientious and high-spending population when it is young.

"There's a lot of money to be made, and credit card companies know it," says CCCS President Howard Dvorkin.

No Tough Sell

Add the colorful flyers filling first-years' mail center boxes to those first-years' relative inexperience with budgeting and credit, and you're left with a dangerous combination.

"You go into the mailroom, and kids are getting credit cards from everyone under the sun," says Matthew J. DeGreeff '89, a Greenough proctor and also a financial aid officer. "It's obscene."

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