Report suggests urgent action is needed 'to stop the UK sleepwalking into a major personal debt crisis'
A growing band of credit-hungry consumers could trigger another financial crash in 10 years as banks, payday lenders and credit card companies add to the debts of low and middle income earners, a leftwing thinktank has warned.
The Smith Institute said policies adopted by the government and regulators since the crash had failed to prevent an escalation of debt among vulnerable younger workers and young families keen to establish a home and live independently.
In a report, Tomorrow's Borrowers: Personal debt by 2025, the thinktank suggests that urgent action is needed "to stop the UK sleep walking into a major personal debt crisis".
The report – written before the chancellor, George Osborne, agreed to limit the interest rates charged by payday lenders – concludes that the economic recovery, which has gathered pace since the spring, will not by itself reduce the growing risk that millions of people will become overburdened by debt.
"Personal indebtedness is likely to carry on increasing, with greater levels of unmanageable debt among both low and middle income households," said the thinktank, which was founded in honour of former Labour leader John Smith.
The report shows that on current trends many young people who take on debt today will find they are saddled with it for longer than previous generations.