Its not. 25 percent interest is common in consumer credit when the borrower does not have any credit or bad credit.
Common in credit cards, common with consumer product loans, even some used car loans. Its much cheaper if you have good credit, even more so if you dont use credit and pay for it with cash/check.
And if they turned away people with poor credit there would be congressional action to force the banks to lend to people who were not qualified as they have in the past.
I wasn’t talking about the interest rate.
The standard system at certain employers in the past (someone talking about the former Budd manufacturing company) was that there was usually someone who “ran the numbers” at the factory, in in each division of the factory.
By “ran the numbers” I mean, ran the numbers game, before the state lottery was common, as well as took sports bets, and probably loaned money as well.
Supposedly at Budd these were usually the Union shop Foreman.
Each week, bets would be taken and paid out, etc.
If you couldn’t pay your whole bet, the Foreman was there to at least collect the Vig.
The Foreman knew where you worked, and were to find you if you owed him money.
The Snap-On man shows up at your work each week.
Your dealership is his “official turf”, assigned to him by Snap-On, with other Snap-On dealers restricted from showing up at the same dealership.
He sells tools, on loan, to mechanics who may barely have the money to pay for the tools.
He shows up each week to collect a certain proportion of any debt owed.
Larger ticket items get lent out by Snap-On, rather than covered by the Snap-On dealer, but the Snap-On dealer is responsible for showing ip each week to collect “The Vig” on the tools and toolbox loans.
If the purchaser can’t pay, then the Snap-On man repossess the tools and toolbox.
The Snap-On man presumably doesn’t break people’s arms, or beat the debtor to death over unpaid Snap-On bills, but the system is somewhat similar.