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Originally published Saturday, July 5, 2008 at 12:00 AM

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Debt on plastic hurting small firms

When Andrew Uribe started building his salsa-making venture, he, like many entrepreneurs, turned to plastic for startup money. But the business didn't...

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — When Andrew Uribe started building his salsa-making venture, he, like many entrepreneurs, turned to plastic for startup money.

But the business didn't take off as quickly as he had hoped. Now the Ellicott City, Md., entrepreneur has three credit cards that carry a combined $30,000, is behind on his bank loan and has moved out of a leased industrial space into a weekend-only space with less capacity.

His minimum credit-card payments run $325 a month, about 15 percent of his total monthly expenses, which he says mainly covers just his interest payments.

"It's horrible because any small profits that I am making, I'm using them to pay the credit cards," the maker of Emy's Salsa Aji said over the phone from New York, where he was meeting with potential investors. "It's hurry up and pay, and swim or sink."

Entrepreneurs have long used credit cards as quick financing. But with the sputtering economy, tightening credit market and cards' notoriously changing terms, more small-business owners are struggling to pay their debt, accumulated on personal as well as small-business credit cards.

As credit standards loosened at the beginning of the decade, banks expanded their small-business credit-card offerings.

Compared with the consumer credit-card market, the small-business market was virtually untapped, and potentially lucrative, because business credit-card use tends to be high-volume and paid in full at the end of the month.

The result was a boom: Small businesses will charge two-and-a-half times more this year than when they ran at about $140 billion in 2002, according to estimates from TowerGroup, a financial-service research and advisory firm.

But as the economy slowed, so did payments. Major small-business credit-card issuers reported a sharp increase in late payments and bad debt over the past year.

"The mantra before was bigger is better in the card business; now [issuers] are becoming much more risk-averse," said Brian Riley, research director for bank cards at TowerGroup. "Standards are getting tightened in line with the economy."

But businesses are still finding credit-card loans accessible. Over the past year, credit cards were the only source of small-business capital that hadn't dropped off, according to the National Small Business Association's 2008 survey. Some 44 percent of small and midsize businesses used credit cards for financing, significantly more than any other source.

About a quarter of business-related credit-card debt is on owners' personal cards; the rest is on small-business cards.

Bankruptcy lawyers and community groups say business-related credit-card debt is a growing issue.

"It's definitely quite a problem at the moment," said Rob Vickers, senior loan manager at the Latino Economic Development Center in Washington, D.C. "It seems like I'm spending a lot more time helping people come up with a strategy to reduce their debt than to take on more debt."

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

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