Debt Management Is a Good Thing

Budgeting for Debt Management

Of course, the earlier you make a financial plan (think budget), the better and easier life will be. However, if you have been conducting your financial life without a plan and find yourself in a real financial bind, it isn't too late to make a budget now.

If each payday, you are only paying the creditors who are screaming the loudest, you need a plan, my friend.

There are many sites on the Internet that have forms that guide you through the budget-making process. Choose one that looks like it could work for you.

The first thing to do as you follow the instructions for making a budget is to list the bills that are for the necessities of life....food, shelter, utilities, transportation, and clothing. These expenses are not optional. After you figure out how much just covering life essentials comes to each month, the remainder is what you have for paying other bills. This is what we call disposable income.

If the total of your disposable income is less than the minimum payments that you are being required to make each month on your secured and unsecured debts, then you are going to need to make some changes and maybe get some help.

The first thing that you can do is contact all of your creditors yourself and try to make arrangements for paying them in a time frame that you can live with. But there are other options.

One option is to contact a debt management company. These companies can help with your unsecured debts (credit cards). There are both paid for and free debt management services available.

Another option is a consolidation loan. This is almost always in the form of a second mortgage, but it could be the answer that you are looking for.

A third option is a debt negotiation company that can negotiate with your creditors for you and get settlements of debts for greatly reduced amounts.

See Also:
Credit Card Debt Management Helps You Say Goodbye To Creditors

Good Debt Management Advice

Debt Management and Interest Rates

It is sometimes just amazing, but people have no idea what interest rate they are paying on loans -- even on their mortgages. Interest rates matter.
Interest on credit card debt is the highest. Credit card interest rates are higher than bank interest rates that you may have for your car loan or the installment loan for furniture or appliances.

Another very amazing thing is that the majority of people do not understand what simple interest is and the difference between simple interest and compound interest. Every high school in America should teach this and the course should be a graduation requirement. Not understanding interest rates costs Americans hundreds of billions of dollars every year.

I do not have the space here to teach a course about interest rates. Remember this: simple interest is less than compound interest. The compounding frequency determines how much higher. Interest that is compounded monthly will be less than interest that is compounded weekly or daily.

Your credit score determines what interest rate you will be offered, and it will also determine just how much interest rate negotiating power that you have. The people with the highest credit scores will always be able to get lower interest rates than people with lower credit scores.

No credit history is viewed in the same way by lenders as a poor credit history, in that the interest rates that are offered will be virtually the same. Build a good credit history and you will get a lower interest rate.

First-time borrowers may have to pay higher interest rates, but it is to their advantage to make their payments on time and in full. If payments can be made prior to the due date, that will raise the credit score. Paying a loan off early will also raise a credit score.

 


More articles:

Debt Advisers Direct
Debt management - MSN Money
Credit Card Debt Management Helps You Say Goodbye To Creditors
Debt consolidation using your home’s equity.
Debt Management Agreements - The Pitfalls

Debt Management Correcting the Course

Debt Management: Getting the Picture

We all have albums (or shoeboxes) filled with photographs. They collectively make up the story of our lives. Photographs are little moments frozen in time that we can look at and recall whole days, weeks, or months of the good times of our lives.

I say good times because we don't take pictures of the bad times. We all enjoy going through those photographs and revisiting happy times of the past.

If we could take snapshots of our financial lives in the same way that we take snapshots of friends, relatives, and the happy moments in our lives, maybe it would help us to remember financial good times as well. It would be nice to remember what we did that was right so that we could avoid making mistakes today and tomorrow, wouldn't it?

If you could look at a photograph of your checkbook that was taken BCC (Before Credit Cards), you would see a balance that you felt so good about. Maybe it wasn't a really big balance, but it was a balance, nevertheless, and it was there after you had paid every debt that you owed. You had money left over...remember that?

It would be nice to see a picture of your savings account, too.

You can make new memories of positive checking account balances and savings account balances once you get control of your out-of-control debts. The way to do that is to just bite the bullet, so to speak, and seek professional help.

Choose a consumer credit counselor and let him or her help you to get your financial life back on the right track so that you can again experience the good financial times that you once had. There isn't a shortcut, and the trip back may not be painless, but it can be accomplished.

 

Related Topics: Budgeting for Debt Management,  Planning for Debt Management, Debt Consolidation Loans-Yes or No


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