The Inverted Economy of the First Mistake
Pressing his thumb against the glass of a cracked smartphone screen, Aldo watches the loading bar stutter in the humid air of a evening. He is today, though he feels closer to 45 when he looks at his bank balance. He is about to take out his fourth loan with MoneyCat, a digital lender that has become a recurring ghost in his financial life.
As the screen refreshes, a number flashes: a much lower interest rate than his first attempt. He pauses, the orange he was peeling-perfectly, in one long, spiraling ribbon-sitting forgotten on the edge of the wooden table. He does a quick mental calculation. On his very first loan, he paid roughly MXN 475 more in interest and fees than he is being asked to pay now for the exact same amount.
It is a quiet, stinging realization. He tells nobody, because admitting you were once more foolish than you are now feels like a secondary tax on your pride. He realizes that his first-ever interaction with the lender was, essentially, a penalty for not knowing better. He was charged the most when he had the least, a structural irony that defines the modern micro-lending landscape in Mexico.
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