Following a meeting with helpline representatives, an internal RBA email in July said the agency "reported a significant number of callers experiencing hardship who are accruing additional debts via credit cards, Buy Now Pay Later, borrowing from friends and family, and increasingly unpaid obligations to the ATO, their utilities providers and council rates".
But it noted that many callers were "gainfully employed" and that "examples were given of mortgagees on six-figure salaries residing in prosperous suburbs of Sydney".
That is a contradiction in terms. Basically it's those who overcommitted based on an assumption which turned out not to hold true. It's happened in the past by the way such as when interest rates were increasing to 17.5%. A number went to fixed rates at say 14% but were financially hurt when rates dropped below the rate at which they fixed and kept falling. Lots of wails about unfair and all that but, hey, you made the decision and signed the contract. Much like now a number want it both ways.
Should some go down the gurgler, another buyer will buy up the property and be smiling as they may consider they got it at a good price. That's capitalism for ya.