試す - 無料

Rising living costs drive millions into debt as loan sharks thrive, warns Atlas Finance CEO

Cape Times

|

December 05, 2025

SOUTH Africans are increasingly turning to credit to survive the rising cost of living, a trend that is deepening indebtedness and leaving millions exposed to loan sharks, says Jack Halfon, founder and CEO of Atlas Finance.

- TAWANDA KAROMBO

In an interview with Business Report on Thursday, Halfon said formal micro-lenders were calling for stronger policy implementation and tight regulation.

Halfon said South African consumers are “taking loans to cover gaps in their spending as the cost of living rises” despite inflation trending down from the highs of the past few years.

But South Africans are also borrowing for unseen expenditures such as burst geysers or new tyres for their vehicles. However, for many South Africans, the current state of the South African micro-lending industry also means that they have significant exposure to loan sharks.

Data from Finmark shows an estimated 10 million South Africans being over-indebted, with 37% of formal credit borrowers facing repayment issues. When those borrowing solely from informal sources is included, the number of over-indebted South Africans rises to approximately 12 million adults.

“The rising cost of living is placing huge pressure on consumers and increasing the demand for credit. This unfortunately has created ground for predatory lenders preying on desperate consumers,” said Halfon.

Cape Times からのその他のストーリー

Cape Times

Boks scale new heights in a year to savour

WHILE this was not a World Cup-winning year for the Springboks — and if there had been a World Cup, they would surely have won it — the year 2025 is right up there in their “best ever” category.

time to read

4 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Transforming education to tackle South Africa’s youth unemployment crisis

THE G20 Leaders’ Summit is over, now the hard work to implement and apply its many declarations must start.

time to read

4 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Cape Times

The bottleneck holding back renewable energy for South African businesses

DISTRIBUTED or onsite renewable energy generation - commercial and industrial systems installed at factories, mines and other large energy users - is the quiet workhorse of South Africa’s energy transition.

time to read

4 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Springboks’ return poses challenge for Stormers

THE Stormers look set to bring back Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu, Damian Willemse and Cobus Reinach for Saturday’s Champions Cup showdown with La Rochelle in Gqeberha — but their return comes with a challenge.

time to read

1 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Ezeebit secures $2m funding to enhance cryptocurrency payment solutions in Africa

EZEEBIT, the FSCA-regulated stablecoin and cryptocurrency payment infrastructure company, has announced the close of a $2.05 million (R35m) seed funding round.

time to read

2 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Cape Times

How to love your job and build career satisfaction

MANY people don't like their jobs.

time to read

3 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Woltemade’s British humour helped him fit in at Newcastle United, says Howe

NEWCASTLE manager Eddie Howe said Nick Woltemade's British sense of humour helped him adapt to life in England, ahead of tonight's Champions League clash in the striker's native Germany against Bayer Leverkusen.

time to read

2 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Chile to vote for president

CHILEANS will elect a new president on Sunday, with an arch-conservative who has promised to expel hundreds of thousands of migrants strongly tipped to beat his leftist rival.

time to read

3 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Miller: SA20 will be good prep for Proteas ahead of 120 World Cup

DAVID Miller believes the upcoming Betway SA20 Season 4 will form a big part of the Proteas’ preparations for the ICC T20 World Cup next year.

time to read

2 mins

December 10, 2025

Cape Times

Cape Times

28 killed on Western Cape roads in first week of festive season

TWENTY-EIGHT people have been killed on Western Cape roads in the first week of the festive season.

time to read

2 mins

December 10, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size