Archive for the ‘debt’ tag
5 Financial tips for the 3rd week of October
The 5 financial tips for the 3rd week of October are given below:
Tip no 1 – Understand the importance of money in order to stay away from debt.
Money helps you buy bread and butter. It helps you to have food, cloth, shelter and other things. People say that money can buy every possible thing on this planet. If you have money and can manage it properly, then you can lead a good financial life. However, if you don’t have money or mismanage it, then you’ll have to face the debt monster and fight with it.
Understand the importance of money and spend it cautiously. Make sure you spend money only on the necessities. Pay all your bills on time and refrain from taking out a loan which you can’t afford to pay.
Tip no 2 – It is not necessary to have common financial goals in a marital relation, but both should work together to achieve them.
You and your husband are 2 different individuals with different tastes, likings, dislikings, etc. Both of you think differently and look at the world at a different perspective. So, it is quite natural that you and your spouse will not have common financial goals in life. You may want to have your own boutique one day. Your husband may want to purchase a mansion after 20 years or so.
Both you and your husband should work hard for achieving your respective financial goals. Sit together and develop a strategy to reach your financial goals. Talk about the ways in which both of you can achieve your financial goals within a specific period of time.
Tip no 3 – Making payments on time can save you from a major financial crisis.
Paying bills within the due date can help you avoid getting into a major financial crisis. If you miss your payment, then it may jeopardize your credit life. For example, if you don’t pay your credit card bills on time, then the creditors will impose late fees and penalties on the cards. The bill amount will keep on increasing with every month. Other than that, creditors will inform the credit bureaus about it. Negative items will appear on your credit report and your score will get hurt.
Tip no 4 – Know where your money goes.
You may know the exact amount you earn every month. However, do you know the exact amount you spend each month? Can you point out the areas where you spend every month? If not, then get to know about it for the sake of your financial health.
Note down your total income and expenses in a given month. Whenever you spend money, note it down in a paper or your cell phone. Keep on a daily tab on your expenses. Calculate the total amount you have spent at the end of month. This way you can check whether or not your expenses are more than your income.
Tip no 5 – Maintain your health in order to save money.
Health is wealth. If you want to live on this earth heartily, then maintain a good health. This will prevent you from getting sick time and again. If you don’t maintain a good lifestyle, then your immune system will lose the ability to fight with bacteria and other germs. Illness will be a regular occurrence. You will have to visit doctor and go through various medical treatments, which are quite costly. This implies that you have to spend a good amount on medical treatments every month. The health insurance companies will also hike the premium if they find out that you tend to get sick frequently.
5 Financial tips for the last week of July 2011
Tip no 1 – Always send a debt validation letter to the collection agency before starting to make the payments against the account
Many a times, collection agencies contact consumers regarding debt payments. They call or send letters to the consumers regarding debts and ask them to make payments as soon as possible. If you have received such kind of a letter or a call from a collection agency, then you should make a written request to them for validating the debt via certified mail. Go through the debt validation letter minutely and find out if all the information is correct. If the collection agency fails to give you a proper validation letter, then send a Cease and Desist letter via certified mail to them.
Tip no 2 – Don’t ever drive under the influence of alcohol
If you are returning from a late night party and are completely drunk, then it is better to ask your friend to drive you home. There is a high chance of meeting an accident when someone drives under the influence of alcohol.
The insurance companies go through the driving records of the consumers from time to time. They are most likely to reject your insurance application after discovering that you have been convicted for drunk driving in the past. Your existing insurer may hike the premium rate instantly. They may also nullify your insurance policy.
Tip no 3 – Make love not debt
If the person you love most asks you for a diamond necklace or a loan, then you should not give it to him/her without analyzing your financial situation. It will be very hard for you to not fulfill the wish and desire of the person you love dearly, but you need to do it for your sake. Financial issues may sour your relationship with that person. Worst, it can ruin it.
If your girlfriend asks you to gift her diamond watch, then you should explain politely that you’ll buy that item after saving the requisite amount in your savings account. If your girlfriend really loves you, then she will definitely welcome your decision.
Tip no 4 – Never reveal your financial details to anyone over phone
You should never reveal financial details to anyone over phone. This is because scammers often call the consumers and make lucrative loan offers. They call the consumers and offer loans at low interest rates. They ask the consumers to reveal their financial details over phone for loan application. Most of the consumers are not able to resist this temptation. They reveal their personal details over phone and get into money troubles later. The scammers use the financial details to drain out money from the consumers’ bank accounts. There have been instances where consumers have become bankrupt due to this serious financial mistake. Make sure you are not one of them.
Tip no 5 – We can tell our values by looking at our check book stubs
This is one of the famous quotes by Gloria Steinem. In the present economic scenario, people determine your value on the basis of your pay check. The more you earn, the better is your value. If you get a fat paycheck at the end of every month from your employer, then society regards you as a valuable person.
For instance, when you apply for a loan, the prospective lender will want to see the copy of your last pay stub. If they find that your income is not good, then they will reject your loan application straightway.
Dealing with debt problems – An exclusive interview with Steve Rhode
Question: How can you deal with debt problems efficiently?
Steve Rhode, better known as Get Out of Debt guy, was the founder of one of the country’s most successful credit counseling agencies. He has been helping consumers in dealing with personal finance issues for the past 15 years. Watch the exclusive interview between the financial expert Gerri Detweiler and Steve Rhode to know about the ways to handle and manage debt/financial problems with competence.
Video transcript of the exclusive interview
You can also have a look at the video transcript of the exclusive interview between Gerri Detweiler and Steve Rhode.
Gerri: Hi, I am Gerri Detweiler. I am doing a video blog for debtconsolidationcare.com.
Today I am interviewing Steve Rhode. Steve Rhode is the ‘Get Out of Debt Guy‘. I met Steve over a decade ago when he was starting what would go on to become one of the most successful credit counseling agencies in the country. Now he helps people through his website “getoutofdebt.org”. Thanks Steve for joining me.
Steve Rhode: Hey Gerri, it is my pleasure and you know what, it has been over a decade, in fact it is probably been 15 years!
Gerri: Oh! Don’t reveal it, come on! Can I edit that out. (chuckle)
Well Steve, one of the things that I have always admired about you is that you really tell like it is. Today I am going talk about one of your post. You have a post called “unvarnished truth about getting out of debt” and I am going to talk about that post because it is pretty provocative and I know that for most people debt is extremely agonizing, and a lot of moral and unethical issues come into play. But you say debt is just debt – Explain what you mean.
Steve: Well, people attach all sorts of meanings to their financial problems. They think that they are somehow losers or failures and they make bad decisions based upon what they think other people will think about it. Another thing I find ironic is in the business world, things like bankruptcies are applauded and rewarded on the Wall Street as they are appropriate and logical action that a company should take. Yet, when it comes to personal finances, consumers are easily manipulated and fooled into taking other actions, not because it is in their interests but it is in the interest of the companies that selling what ever it is.
Gerri: You know one of the comments I often hear is that Steve when I am talking about the creditors group or even in the news media is that, they’ll say – “wow! people don’t pay their bills and hurt all of us’. So, what you say to that argument?
Steve: Well, I say that the creditor is being hurt because some people aren’t paying, some can’t afford to pay and then the price of the product are co-related because the product needs to be sold and this is always the way it has been. A creditor needs to price a credit product and so they included an appropriate amount of loss and they know what those losses are and that what facts the interest rate. Interest rate is actually a calculation that involves the cost of money, profit and the approximate losses. Now the people you are talking about here, who should consider bankruptcy, who need to take a good, honest, unvarnished look at the situation are people who otherwise don’t have a solution to their debt because these are the folks who are draining their retirement plans just to make few more months payment.
Gerri: Well, I think that you’re referring to a post about the ultimate sin that tempts us when we are getting out of debt – Explain what you mean by that.
Steve: Well, people are afraid of the collection company calling, they are afraid what the collector might think of them, they are afraid of what their neighbors might think of them if they had financial problems and so because of that emotional fear, what they wind up doing – is draining their eye arrays, draining their retirement money in order to not satisfy debt but continue making payments and the only thing that happens then is you’re out of money but you’re not out of debt.
Gerri: Yeah, I have seen so that many times, so many consumers wind up in bankruptcy any way and at least they would have the money they really desperately for retirement had they gotten help for that situation sooner.
Steve: Well that money is money that is saved for when you’re least likely to be able to earn. So, when you make nature of reaction and you blow through that money now when you’re 40 or 50 or 60, you’re not going to be able to easily replace that money and then the only thing that is going to happen is when you get old enough where you can’t work, you know what you’re going to do? You don’t have the money any more and I’m afraid for some people it is going to be really tough times.
Gerri: Yeah, I agree. So, what you would say to someone who is conversing with you through your website. For example: He is saying “I am really struggling and I want to do the right thing but I am having a hard time paying my bills” – What you say to those folks?
Steve: Well, The first thing I ask is this – “Do you have a greater responsibility to repair the past or to fix the future? Because it is one thing to want to repair your debts because you feel like you’ve the moral, religious, ethical opportunities, so, but you also need to consider the implications and sacrifices that are going to be created in future to go down that path. For example: I and you, we both have seen these examples. Somebody, who decides that they’re going to repay their debts at all costs and in doing that they’re just living a barely month-to-month, they can’t afford to save, there are no emergency fund, they are living in an area which is not very safe and the whole reason they are doing this, is because they want to repair their past. So, let’s go to the basics first. What is the goal you want to achieve? That is always my first question.
Gerri: Okay, and then after you look at the goal you want to achieve, then, beyond getting out of debt, I imagine for other people it feels pretty bleak like “I am never going to have a future”.
Steve: Well, it does feel bleak. I filed bankruptcy myself in 1990 and it sucks. But, the bottom line to it is, is it appropriate for you? Do you want to get storm down a path that is not appropriate for you and lose more money and more time or you want to start your life over menially. Now, for example, let’s say you engage in some solutions that take you years down the road and you’re still working on repairing your debt. Now, if you had actually considered bankruptcy and gone bankrupt now, most people or 75% of people qualify for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and their debt is eliminated within few months and they can begin to repair their credit immediately. Now, some people say, you know “I am a loser, I filed bankruptcy”. And I have to be honest that at one point in my life, I actually felt that too.
But, more I looked into it and more situations I saw, I realized 2 things – I realized number 1 – if business can be rewarded for bankruptcy and it is the appropriate thing for them, why isn’t for the consumers? And the number two, I realized the way I was feeling, it was about my internal feeling and not about the world. Now, I went bankrupt in 1990. I told you that. I have told the world. I told over the years. But for 10 years or so, I didn’t tell the world. I was ashamed how people will think and you know what, not only did I tell my friends I have gone bankrupt but it is all over the web, the newspapers, everybody knows it, u know what, my life is not changed one bit. (Smile). So, it doesn’t take you down the dark path but what does take you down the dark path is falling for false debt relief promises, falling for these incredible benefits – “We’ll get you out of debt in 12 months or “Sign up now and we’ll invalidate your credit contacts” or “Sign up now and pay $9000, we’ll teach you how to trip up the debt collectors, how to sue them and eliminate your debt. These are all, almost all; unequivocally these are all scams that will separate you from your remaining money.
Gerri: Yeah, and unfortunately, it is all too common today.
Steve: Yeah, and you know, the bankruptcy attorneys is like “don’t buy”. And even if you decide, even if you say I am never filing bankruptcy, you owe to yourself and you owe to your family to go and talk to a bankruptcy attorney and find out the facts. Is there making assumptions and judgments, find out the facts, sleep on it, and then think about whether or not bankruptcy is appropriate for you. The thing I was here to tell you is that “if I am go bankrupt, I am not going to get credit for 10 years, I will never get credit again, I’ll never be able to buy a house or a car”, and that is simply not true.
Gerri: Yeah
Steve: You can get, in fact if you do a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you’ll get discharge notice in a few months and very shortly thereafter, I mean within weeks, you’ll start to get new credit offers. And it is easy to rebuild your credit and once you rebuild your credit, once your debt is gone, and you’re able to save again, you’ve the down payment, you can buy a house, a car. It is not the stigma that we hear and the people who are promoting that stigma are technically debt collectors who are trying to manipulate you in the plain and our own fear based upon what the people say, rather than what they do.
Gerri: Yeah
Steve: Well, Steve, like I said, you always say like what it is and I really appreciate your time today and any one who is watching, make sure you check out Steve posts at “getoutofdebt.org” to know more about unvarnished truth about getting out of debt in more detail. If you have questions about your credit, you can visit “debtconsolidationcare.com”.
FTC fines Allied Interstate collection agency for violating laws
Federal Trade Commission has imposed a fine on Allied Interstate collection agency for repeatedly violating the debt collection laws. FTC has taken this step after the collection agency has been reported of violating FDCPA (Fair Debt Collection Practices Act) and FTCA (Federal Trade Commission Act) laws time and again.
FTC fines Allied Interstate for violation of laws
It has been reported that Allied Interstate, Inc has been slapped with a fine by FTC. The Minnesota based collection agency will have to pay a fine of around $1.75 million for collecting money from wrong people, and using aggressive methods when dealing with consumers. FTC has taken this action to ensure that debt collectors check their information before attempting to collect money from the consumers. Collectors will have to pay a heavy penalty if they try to collect money from consumers without verifying their information is correct. Read the rest of this entry »
New debt settlement laws aim to safeguard consumers
According to a recent news (October 5, 2010), the Federal Trade Commission has passed new laws concerning debt settlement that will supposedly make getting out of a debt in a debt settlement process much easier for the consumers. This is good news for all those out there who have been under a lot of debt burden and find their debt settlement companies harassing them for repayment or exorbitant debt charges.
Effectively, these new debt settlement laws ban the debt settlement companies from taking upfront fees from their consumers and these laws are applicable for small scale business as well. In other words, consumers and small scale business do not have to pay any amount of money to their debt settlement companies until their debt has completely cleared! Read the rest of this entry »

