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Debt Management Is a Family Affair Debt Management and Consumer Counseling It isn't very hard to get into financial difficulties. Getting out is a lot harder. It might be a bit painful, but it can be done. And once you have breathed out-of-debt air, you will never again want to find yourself in deep debt waters again. Most people do not view credit cards as loans, but that is precisely what they are -- loans. When you hand a credit card to a cashier, you have in effect borrowed the money to pay for your purchase. The same is true when you enter your credit card information on websites to buy merchandise. It's true that credit cards are a convenience. They make buying things much easier and so much quicker, but they are loans. When you engage the services of a consumer credit counseling service, you will be asked to supply a list of your debts. You will find that some debts can be renegotiated -- even some secured debts can be renegotiated, including mortgages. You will also find out that your unsecured debt (credit cards) can be renegotiated. But there is a catch there. A credit counselor is usually in a position to stop the interest and late charges from continuing to mount on your credit card bills. Interest rates can be decreased and late charges can be eliminated altogether. The catch is that the accounts will be closed...permanently. You cannot continue to use those credit cards, and you cannot apply for another credit card until your debts have been paid off in full. Your total monthly obligations can be reduced by quite a bit and you will be able to live within the budget that will be created for you. It sounds really painful, doesn't it? The truth! You are going to have to make some major adjustments, but that isn't necessarily a bad thing.
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Debt Management - Getting the Priorities Straight
| Debt Management for the Future Debt Management and Credit Scores There is so much information (and misinformation) out on the net about credit scores. Some people are under the impression that a credit score and a credit report are one and the same thing. That is wrong. They are two entirely different things. The credit SCORE is based upon the credit REPORT. Credit scoring is just a simplified method of identifying good credit risks from poor credit risks. You can bet that lenders will get a credit SCORE before they proceed with the loan process but before a loan process goes very far, the lender will get full credit reports and from all three of the credit reporting agencies. The credit score is based only upon credit history. The things that determine a credit score are whether payments were made on time and in full as well as on other things that are contained in a full credit report like employment history and income level. Points are awarded for each of these things as well as many others. You might say that the credit score is a snapshot of a credit report -- a summation, if you will, that gives lenders a good idea of whether an applicant is a good or bad credit risk. Some people believe that if they stay out of debt and pay in cash as they go, they will have a good credit score and a good credit report, but that is just wrong. They will have no credit history, no credit score, and no credit report. All of these things are based upon credit -- payments of loans and debts. You must have been granted loans by banks, or you must have a credit card payment history, in order to have a credit score or a credit report. The fastest (and least expensive way) of building credit history is to get a credit card, make charges, and then pay them off before any interest is added. |
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| Debt Management and Health Easy Credit and Debt Management Before credit cards came into existence (and, yes, there was a world without credit cards at one time) it was a lot more difficult for people to get in over their heads financially. It happened, of course, but not with nearly the frequency that it happens in the credit card laden world of today. People really didn't have the ability in the form of a credit card to get so deeply in debt that they couldnt get out. Loans had to be approved by other living people. Credit histories were checked and employment was verified before credit was extended. Credit cards have made getting credit very, very easy, and that easy credit is getting a lot of people into serious financial difficulty. If a person has a social security number, they can get a credit card. In fact, I'm not certain that even a social security number is necessary -- maybe just a mailing address works. A man in California got a credit card for his dog and used nine zeros as a social security number. Having a credit card is not a badge of honor. It doesn't assure the world that a person is financially responsible and that they pay their debts on time and in full each month. Managing debt means being financially responsible. We live in a world where instant gratification is the expected norm. See it, want it, buy it...with a credit card. The problem is that it wasn't bought; it was charged, and the bill will come due. Buy it now, worry about paying for it later seems to be the mantra of the nation today. Credit cards are the vehicle that is used to drive into deep and unrelenting debt. That easy credit is the root cause of second, third, and final notices filling mailboxes, and it provides jobs for debt collectors who will be calling day and night. |
Related Topics: Debt Management Is a Good Thing,
Debt Management Correcting the Course, The Debt Management Plan
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