Getting Control of Debt Management

Debt Consolidation Loans: Yes or No?

A multitude of small monthly payments can add up to very big trouble. Before you know how it happened, you can suddenly have more payments going out than you have income coming in every month.

You aren't alone. It happens to a lot of people.

On the upside of debt consolidation loans, all debt is included. In debt management agreements, only unsecured debt is considered (credit cards). But in a debt consolidation loan, all debt is considered...secured debt as well as unsecured debt.

On the downside of debt consolidation loans, these loans are almost always second mortgages. In a nutshell...you really are betting the farm (the house) that you can meet the monthly payments every month until the consolidation loan is paid off.

With debt management agreements, even if it comes to the point where you must declare bankruptcy, this is still unsecured debt. Courts can set it aside. When you make a debt consolidation loan in the form of a second mortgage, this debt that was once unsecured now becomes secured. If it comes to the point where you must declare bankruptcy, your home can be foreclosed upon to satisfy debtors.

This point should not be taken lightly. Your home and the equity that you are establishing in it is your largest single asset. The mortgage on your home is usually also your largest monthly payment.

The low monthly payment that is promised with a debt consolidation loan is not always because the interest rate is lower. Sometimes it is because the debt payments have been extended for many additional years instead. Second mortgages can be as long as 30 years, and remember that you have bet the house that you could make every single one of those payments in full and on time.

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Debt Consolidation Loans-Yes or No

Debt Management and Family Crisis

A family crisis can be caused by many things. A job that was thought to be secure can be lost. Sickness and accidents can happen. An older parent can require care.

Lots of things can happen that are beyond your control, and certainly not your fault, but that can put you in a financial bind.

A decrease in income has the same effect as an increase in out-go. There is the inevitable shortfall. Maybe the shortfall is temporary and you can see the light at the end of the tunnel. Maybe there isn't a light at the end of the tunnel and you really can't say just how long this financial crisis is going to last.

What you can do to get yourself and your family through a really rough spot financially will depend greatly upon how you have handled your finances before. If you have always paid your bills on time and in full each and every month you will find that your creditors are going to be more than willing to work with you and actually help you survive your crisis.

The first thing to do is to contact each creditor yourself. This should preferably be done before the first payment is late. Explain the situation and you will likely find that your creditors will allow you to just make interest payments only and that it will not do any harm to your credit score. This is the first and best option.

If your family crisis is going to continue for more than a few months, then you may need to seek some relief through a consumer counseling agency or through a debt management company. You might even consider the possibility of a debt consolidation loan.

Whatever course of action that you choose, it is far better for you to initiate it and to do so as early as possible before any damage is done to your credit score.

 


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Easy Credit and Debt Management

Debt Management Makes a Comeback

Not really! It would be nice, of course, if everybody suddenly became excellent debt managers and such nasty little things as late notices and harassing phone calls by bill collectors became things of the past.

If everybody only took on debts that they could pay on time and in full each and every month, the debt management companies and the consolidation loan companies could just fold their tents and slip away into the night. That hasn't happened, and there isn't any indication that it
is going to happen in the near (or far) future.

More and more people are finding themselves in financial holes more and more often today. When discussing this situation with a group of my peers, the consensus was that instant gratification and less than adequate financial education are the two principal causes.

In days gone by, parents taught their children about financial responsibility. Children were given small allowances and then instructed how to spend it. They were required to save 10%, give 10% to charity, and to make sure they had enough to cover their necessities until allowance day came around again. If the kids ran short, they were not allowed to dip into their savings. They simply did without until allowance day. Mom and dad did not pony up to cover the shortfall if junior had blown his allowance on ice cream.

There was no such thing as instant gratification. If a kid wanted a bicycle, he had to save for it. It didn't just appear because he begged mom and dad for it.

It really is time for parents to again begin teaching children about financial responsibility and debt management, and the schools need to do their part as well. We have become a nation of borrowers without a plan to repay our debts.

 

Related Topics: Debt Management and Collecting Your Debts,  Debt Management Is a Good Thing, Debt Management-Getting the Picture


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