You actually took a RFID chip?
I'm not following.
Maybe it's a "slanguage" problem. In the US, saying you used the "chip" would imply that you had one a Radio Frequency IDentification chip implanted. In the US, they're used on pets and are starting to be used in some food animals for tracking purposes.(thankfully not in widespread use, in fact, I didn't think they'd even been APPROVED for human use)
I'm guessing now you mean a so-called "smart card" with a memory chip in it that holds all your credit data?
Well, that was my view up until now. However, it turns out that not having a credit card means you don't have much of a credit history. Which means no one will give you a loan, a mortgage, or even a rental car. It's a problem.
Increasingly, it's even costing people JOBS. Employers have been known to screen job applicants' credit histories, supposedly as indicators of their general trustworthiness.
I don't think anyone has been actively FIRED yet for bad credit history, but it wouldn't surprise me if it started happening.
Having a frakked up credit history can also keep you from getting (or keeping) a security clearance and/or financial clearance for jobs that involve cash handling (like bank tellers, etc).
I figured I'd get a single credit card and use it a bit to build up my credit history.....but they wouldn't approve me for the Amazon card. Due to lack of credit history.
So now I'm pondering the best way out of this catch-22. My advice: find some way to establish a meaningful credit history. Never know when you'll need it.
Every "repair your history" article I've ever seen pretty much says the same thing. Get a "secured" credit card (one backed by a bank deposit) with a major reputable credit card company. Use it and make damn sure you keep up the payments (no "lates", etc). After about a year, you should build up enough of a record that you should start getting credit card offers.
Oh, and make sure you don't "short" ANY other bill (phone, rent, utilities, etc), as inceasingly THOSE go on your credit record too.
Prior to the CARD act, shorting those bills could trigger "universal default" and jack your card interest rates and do other nasty things to your credit rating