Times are tough all over the world and a Los Angeles pawn shop is seeing its fair share of new customers of all ‘collar colors’. Blue-collar workers and white-collar workers are both being laid off due to the downward economy and they all seem to need quick cash to pay for everything from mortgages to new clothes for the kids or gasoline and food.
Instead of the persistently unemployed or underemployed, an Atlanta pawn shop now sees an increase in people who only a year ago had stable jobs and were at a more solid position than they are today. These people had decent jobs and a little money left over at the end of their paychecks, but as the economy slowly slid into an uncontrollable twist and then a full-blown recession, these good people were dragged down with it, leaving them rushing to pay the bills. Many of these people turn to their neighborhood pawn shops for quick cash.
More people are becoming desperate for cash when they can’t find a way to make ends meet so they turn to a Philadelphia pawn shop to sell their gold jewelry, or pawn items they no longer use but hopefully one day might return to use them again. Items like air compressors, professional grade drills or power nail guns, all pawned by out of work construction workers who have no use for them and could definitely use the cash.
Although it may not seem to make much sense, people like a construction worker pay a monthly fee in order to keep their valuables from being sold on the pawn shop sales floors. A pawn shop works in one of two ways: the first is a person will take a valuable item, such as a laptop into the pawn shop, present their photo ID and walk away with cash. The pawn shop will then hold the item for a period of 30 to 60 days and when the owner of the laptop returns, they pay an interest penalty along with the original amount of money borrowed and they receive their collateral back. If the customer does not want their items back, then the pawn shop is free to place the valuable on their sales shelves in order to recover the loan money.
Tags: Atlanta pawn shop, laptop, Los Angeles pawn shop, Philadelphia pawn shop