A news account by reporter Pamela Yip of Dallas Morning News of June 23rd 2009, reported that the Debt Relief USA, Inc. of Addison, Texas, one of the major
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Debt Consolidation Credit cards are financial devices which their users end up digging themselves too deep with. Pay it later is too easy with a credit card. Too many users will buy stuff that is outside of their means and as such will get into trouble. Compound this with numerous cards, and......
Programmer and Blogger Seeks Debt Consolidation Loan My Prosper Group is proud to present our first listing... This listing is attempting to put the social in social capital. Deep Market also posted the following Social Lending is not Socialism. He has been a member of my group, following the p2p lending market and commenting on RateLadder for......
3 Ways to Consolidate Credit Card Debt Today's post is a guest blog by Nicole James of Debt Consolidation Care. If you are overburdened with multiple credit card bills and want a solution, then credit card debt consolidation could be the answer that you are looking for. This process combines all your multiple credit card bills into......
Are debt consolidation services for profit, and non-profit companies reliable? This is a guest post by Robin Williams at DebtConsolidationCare.com The main objective of the debt consolidation companies is to make you debt free. Surviving the credit crunch has become a challenge as corporate giants are closing down shutters and there are many that have declared bankruptcy. There is a......
Tips For Choosing The Best Business For Debt Consolidation For the individuals that are interested in completing a debt consolidation program to get rid of consumer debt, finding the right business for debt consolidation can be a difficult task. By learning some methods for choosing the right business for debt consolidation, an individual will be less likely to be......
In recent times, the messages coming out of the constant advertising bombardment by businesses, professionals and institutions engaged in the business of debt collections, would probably lead the ordinary consumer to think that a debtor seeking some debt relief, is limited basically to only two or three options – namely, some kind of
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Credit Card Debt Consolidation Options Credit cards have been up to some nasty tricks lately. They are raising interest rates with only a subtle notice, and cutting credit lines with no notice. Angry consumers are looking for ways to consolidate their debt. I have had some first-hand experience with both scenarios, which led to me......
Debt Consolidation "Happy Talk" Did Not Give David Miller That Happy Feeling! Debt Consolidation was supposed to free David from debt and debt collectors in 12 months. What David Miller of Atlanta, GA, got was far more than he expected, causing him to wonder what just happened. David never believed his credit could get any worse or that debt consolidation would not......
A perspective on debt consolidation Photo by: dbgeorge A reader recently wrote to me saying they loved my site and tips but wondered why I didn't talk about debt consolidation loans. This reader, like many of my readers has more than $50,000 worth of debt and I am sure the path to being debt......
Flashback: Use a debt consolidation service? Mighty Bargain Hunter hosted Carnival of Debt Reduction #24, and this week's Flashback comes from a post by Blueprint for Financial Prosperity: What Do Debt Consolidation Services Offer? Debt consolidation services are legitimate. They help you to simplify your debt reduction process by paying your creditors from one check that......
Is Debt Consolidation the Right Option? If you happen to be struggling with paying your bills, then debt consolidation might be a good solution for you. Debt consolidation is where you combine all of your bills and debt into one, so that you are making one single lowered payment that can be afforded. Consolidating helps you......
In Idaho and around the country, it has been remarkably easy for borrowers to find themselves in a situation where credit card bills may spiral out of control, and the need for debt relief has been never more important. Even during the boom times of the last few years, when the economy of Idaho and the rest of America was blithely spinning along (and, perhaps unfortunately, credit was too freely given), our citizenry continued spending more than they earned, and, now that our financial system teeters upon the brink of total collapse, these personal debt balances threaten the household stability of countless Idaho residents.
With these debt loads continuing to grow – the inevitable consequence of compound interest rates set as exceedingly high as the credit cards would allow – all but the most self destructive of Idaho families have begun researching their debt relief alternatives. Most of them are more than familiar with the Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy protections, though a surprisingly large percentage of Idaho borrowers seem unaware of the dramatic changes that have been written in to the United States bankruptcy code following the passage of 2005 legislation by the congress, but there are a good variety of other debt relief plans out there with which Idaho consumers may be able to finally liquidate their loans for good. When examining their household budgets many Idaho families will find out that they have honestly no other choice but to employ Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection for successful debt relief, but that does not mean there are not further solutions available which could offer the same eventual elimination of unsecured loans without the problems (everything from lowered credit scores to attorney costs to property seizure) that bankruptcy necessarily entails.
We mention unsecured loans because these sort of loans tend to have the highest interest rates and the least possibility of some benefit to the Idaho borrowers. Loans that are secured to actual property like home mortgages and car loans should feature considerably lower rates of interest, and, in many instances, they may even serve as effective tax breaks (mortgage loans on primary residences, particularly) for borrowers with sufficient levels of income to have that inform their debt relief strategies. Moreover, when we talk about unsecured loans, we are really talking solely about those unsecured loans (medical bills, charge cards, consumer loans, and, the greatest hindrance to Idaho borrower’s personal finances, credit card accounts) which could potentially be eliminated through a Chapter 7 bankruptcy discharge. Once again, given the aftermath of the 2005 congressional legislation which weakened bankruptcy protection and made it far more hazardous for any consumers to successfully file for bankruptcy and then endure the privations, we do not entirely encourage the procedure for most borrowers. As a matter of fact, under the new bankruptcy code, Idaho borrowers would find it hard pressed to even enter the Chapter 7 debt relief program if they have earned more than the median income for residents of the state in the half year prior to filing for bankruptcy declaration. That’s right, no matter the amount of debt that the Idaho borrowers are carrying (which, for an extended period of hospitalization could easily run to the high six figures in virtually no time at all), they could be prevented by national laws from even attempting to liquidate their applicable financial obligations through bankruptcy simply because they had a particularly good run at business and even if, with current economic indicators appearing so dismal, there is no likelihood the profitability would continue.
There are a few different things that borrowers still desperate for bankruptcy protection may do to reclaim Chapter 7 eligibility despite their income – specifically, there is a means test that allows Idaho residents who earn a bit too much to claim neediness by showing that, after deducting all necessary expenses (counting utilities, household cost of living purchases, and all debt payments both secured and unsecured), they would not be able to pay one hundred dollars a month to their assembled creditors for the next five years – but, unfortunately, the new bankruptcy laws limit the analysis and leniency with which the trustee appointed at random by the Idaho courts evaluate each case. Even more potentially bothersome, those cost of living expenses do not take into account the actual expenses of a given household but instead solely use the figures that were set by the Internal Revenue Service for average Idaho families which, for borrowers living in a particularly nice part of Boise, could be extremely misleading. Attorneys experienced in both Idaho bankruptcy law as well as the new federal regulations could be incredibly useful when helping borrowers figure out the most effective way to utilize Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection as a method of debt relief, but, with the clamor for bankruptcy declarations seemingly growing by the month as the economic situation worsens nationwide (Idaho very much included), the fees charged by these experienced lawyers have increased alongside. Alongside the administrative costs and the debt relief courses (another side effect of the 2005 legislation) now required before bankruptcy declaration as well as again before bankruptcy discharge which the potential bankruptcy filers must pass and pay for themselves, it turns out the poorest Idaho consumers who most need debt relief could be effectively disallowed from even considering the bankruptcy protection.
For those borrowers who earn a low enough income compared to other Idaho households that they would qualify for the Chapter 7 debt relief bankruptcy while still maintaining enough disposable income or funds tucked away in savings that they could potentially use to pay for the law firm (do not expect the bankruptcy attorneys, as should seem utterly reasonable, to accept credit), the newly designed problems of Chapter 7 debt relief bankruptcies do not end there. Borrowers in Idaho and across the country have grown accustomed to the notion that some of their more high priced assets – a boat, say, or a stake in a liquid investment opportunity – would be at the mercy of the court trustee and could theoretically taken by local court officials for eventual auction to attempt to repay the various creditors whose claims to unsecured debts had otherwise been eliminated through the bankruptcy process. That threat still stands, but, according to the way the code is now written and forcibly carried out, the Idaho borrowers shall have to list all of their personal possessions by degree of potential replacement value rather than the far more lenient resale value. The repercussions of that detail, barely reported at the time of legislation, could mean that virtually every thing that the borrowers would own may be seized upon the discretion of the courts. Residents of Idaho are rather luckier than their borrowers across the country when it comes to dealing with this particular problem as the state exemptions set down under Idaho law shall guarantee that the most important aspects of household furnishings and family mementos will be rendered safe from government intrusions. None the less, there’s a clear limit to how much could be exempted, and many Idaho borrowers interested in debt relief bankruptcies shall have to gird themselves for the possibility of losing property that may range from second cars to home entertainment systems to even, after a certain amount of recognized value, their clothing and furniture.
Stacked up against the costs that we have shown bankruptcy debt relief to inevitably contain, the potential for property forfeiture, and the clear damage to Idaho filers’ credit reports and FICO scores, Chapter 7 may not be the best alternative even for those borrowers who manage to qualify for the program. Chapter 13 shall be another option – one that boasts the same monetary expenditures and similar difficulties regarding credit scores – which should let alone the borrowers’ possessions and assets, but, since the Idaho borrowers shall have to repay a majority of their debts while subjecting their household to a budget drawn up by Idaho court trustees that will have to use the same (again, almost always drastically low when set against the true figures) expenses that have been calculated by IRS bean counters, this can result in grave changes in life style. Honestly, aside from those Idaho borrowers that truly believe they have to chance the Chapter 13 debt relief program to save their home from foreclosure, there’s simply not much that this sort of bankruptcy could offer the ordinary Idaho consumer. We do appreciate how important their primary residences should seem for ever resident of Idaho, and, of course, we have seen how the falling real estate market and rising unemployment rates combined with the previous actions of predatory mortgage lenders to drive home foreclosures to unprecedented levels in Idaho and across America. Nevertheless, if at all possible, borrowers should begin their own attempts at debt relief well before this sort of decision about whether or not bankruptcy’s needed would even come in to play.
Of course, most of our Idaho borrowers have likely tried some variance of debt relief on their own, and, from our discussions with consumers throughout Idaho, they have likely repeatedly attempted to quell spending instincts on a regular basis to avoid just such an eventuality. Unfortunately, leaving aside the good number of consumers in Idaho that need debt relief assistance because of medical problems or some similar familial emergency, it has simply been too easy for households to blithely ignore the mounting pressures from their escalating debts and indulge poor spending habits; indeed, some research suggests that borrower may actually spend more when confronted with out of control credit card bills as a way to alleviate stress and tensions. Much of the fault lies with initial budgeting procedures.
Every Idaho family has some idea of what their monthly obligations are supposed to look like as well a vague idea of how much money they could reasonably plan to earn over the coming financial quarter, but, beyond that, a depressing portion of Idaho consumers have little to no idea where their funds actually go and only actively focus upon debt relief solutions once personal economic troubles have essentially precluded homemade debt relief remedies. At once, all Idaho households should take the time to list all of their expenses. We’re not talking about just the utilities and debt payments (including secured debts that could be advantageous to maintain for as long as possible), though borrowers should write down those as well and even call representatives of the creditors to make sure that they attain the accurate information about their various accounts, but, as well, each Idaho household should take efforts to compile some record of their actual purchasing history so that both they have some idea of where to cut spending and a realistic notion of what they would be able to expect when planning their budgets. Too many Idaho borrowers, fired up by the notion of debt relief, plan out a system of spending that does not take into account the potential spikes in expenses throughout the year (heating bills, particularly in this economic age of pricing uncertainty, tend to rather dramatically escalate in the winter months) nor indulge the occasional lapses of discipline that every family should occasionally come to expect.
Unfortunately, no matter how greatly the Idaho family may want to fully achieve a lasting system of debt relief on their own, the limitations of income or excesses of past loans may sadly not allow the personal solution for all borrowers. Indeed, this (along with the failure of modern bankruptcy to successfully deal with the debt relief needs and desires of many of the consumers that such a program was initially started to fulfill) has caused the explosion of different debt relief alternatives within Idaho and across the United States. Consumer Credit Counseling shouldn’t require much in the need of explanation to Idaho borrowers who have turned on a radio or television in the past few years thanks to the Consumer Credit Counseling industry’s seemingly ubiquitous advertisements. Much as the larger attractions of the CCC approach are widely known – consolidation of unsecured bills with lower interest rates and, ideally, the waiver of fees that the credit cards or other accounts had previously assessed – but the costs of this program are considerable and the effects upon credit reports are nearly as ruinous as those seen from bankruptcy protection. Furthermore, media attention in Idaho and throughout America have increasingly centered upon the growing realization that Consumer Credit Counseling companies, though they may indeed be not for profit (an essentially meaningless designation that merely points out that they pay as much to their employees as they receive in funds), these firms are raking in the dollars by double dipping fees by demanding extravagant money from not only their clients but also their clients’ credit card companies.
Although Chapter 7 debt relief programs are, as we have hopefully demonstrated, currently less than palatable for almost any Idaho borrower, the chance of bankruptcy still puts the fear of all that’s holy into lending corporations, and, as a result, they will do whatever seems financially possible – including propping up the Consumer Credit Counseling industry – to limit the desirability of debt liquidation through bankruptcy. On the other hand, because of this lingering threat, another debt relief approach has grown more popular around Idaho. The
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Carrying Consumer Debt Is The American Way. In case no one noticed, there is a continually growing debt problem here in this country, especially with the economy the way it is. Americans are putting themselves further into a hole that while it seemed shallow at first, continues to get deeper and deeper the longer unpaid debt racks......
Ruin Your Credit Fast, pt1 Granted, there are a wide variety of different ways that you can ruin your credit over time, but do you want to know what the quickest and most dangerous ways are? Here are five ways that you can quickly and effectively destroy your credit. 1 - Break your budget. Sure......
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Consumer Credit Counseling and the Law Let's be clear about two things:. First, there are millions of consumers who could likely benefit from counseling to help them control spending and reduce credit card debt. Second, finding a credit counselor who is competent, disinterested, and reasonably priced is about as easy as getting a straight answer from......
Student Loans For People With Bad Credit Or No Credit Having bad credit does not mean that a student can't get a loan to go to school. There are in fact many programs that help students get financing that are not focused on credit. Stafford loans are loans specifically for school that are guaranteed by the federal government, so that......
In recent months, we’ve seen many regulators and legal authorities in jurisdictions across the country signify official concern that an increasing number of companies which operate in the debt cures business today, are essentially debt relief scam operations that are out to cheat and dupe an overburdened debt-ridden population in a bad national economy. The most recent among those, is Attorney General Andrew Cuomo in New York, whose office had subpoenaed some 14 debt relief operations and one law firm in May 2009 from across the nation for investigations into their
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How Much Debt Is Too Much? The NY Times Economix blog asked how much debt should households have. They identify a ratio total household debt to disposable income. It's a very interesting chart which they do explain in easy to understand terms. A value of 100% means that for every dollar of disposable income someone has,......
Debt Consolidation Tips In a previous post I mentioned that some bloggers make a decent living. Well one of the highest revenue producers for John Chow was ReviewMe. Not being one to question someone smarter than me, I immediately signed up to whore myself out review other blogs for cash. Sure enough, a......
Debt Consolidation Tips If you're swimming in a sea of debt and trying to figure out how to keep your head above the water, one of the easiest ways is to consolidate. However, the actual process of consolidation can be confusing and it is all too easy to make mistakes that will end......
Is Debt Consolidation the Right Option? If you happen to be struggling with paying your bills, then debt consolidation might be a good solution for you. Debt consolidation is where you combine all of your bills and debt into one, so that you are making one single lowered payment that can be afforded. Consolidating helps you......

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