Archive for December, 2011
23
Dec

Christmas is the one time of year we can pretty much guarantee will leave our pockets feeling lighter. After all, covering the cost of gifts, decorations, socialising and food & drink for all the family doesn’t come particularly cheaply – and many of us will turn to credit cards and other forms of borrowing to give our budgets a boost.

However, credit card debt could become a costly expense if you don’t take steps to repay your balance sooner rather than later. Let’s look at how you could get on top of your debts after Christmas and keep your finances in shape.

Are you struggling with your debts?
If you can no longer afford your agreed credit card repayments, agreeing a new affordable repayment plan should be a serious priority. For example, you could begin to make lower repayments at a realistic pace with a debt management plan – an informal agreement that your lenders may decide is the best way of getting back the money you owe them.

If you decide a debt management plan is the best approach to your debts, your lenders would be asked to accept monthly payments you can afford, ensuring that they fit around all your other essential costs (utilities, food, rent/mortgage). However, making smaller repayments over a longer period could end up being more costly overall (due to interest), unless your lenders agree to freeze interest on your unsecured debts.

You’d make your monthly repayments until you’ve repaid the total amount you owe, or until a change in your circumstances means you can start making your original repayments again.

Although making reduced payments will show up on your credit history for at least three years, which could make borrowing more credit difficult in that time, debt management is only suitable for people who can’t make their agreed repayments, so it’s likely your credit rating will already have been affected.

Are you managing your debts well?
If you’re repaying your credit card debt relatively easily, you may want to consider making more than the minimum repayments. Getting out of debt faster could also save you quite a bit of money in interest payments, so it may be worth the extra commitment.

If you can’t afford to repay more than your current available finances allows, you may consider ways of boosting your budget to ‘overpay’ your debts, e.g. sell some old DVDs, cancel that gym membership you don’t use, or use discount vouchers when food shopping. Working your way towards becoming debt-free could be a New Year’s resolution worth sticking to!

02
Dec

In Europe there are no political leaders fail to effectively manage over-indebtedness of the last ten years. Whatever the causes are different on both sides of the Atlantic, this debt is now a fact and it is better to face the reality of trying to conceal the seriousness of the situation.

Is that the debt is not a financial matter: if the result is a financial problem, nor the causes nor the solutions are not strictly financial. Certainly, the intelligent use of mechanisms to spread the repayments and lower interest expense is useful. But it can not remove a weight hanging over us always .

Disposal of assets is the quickest solution and most efficient: it is immediately followed by a cash payment instantly reducing debt and interest burden attached to it. The privatization continues to be regarded in Europe as a scarecrow by those who believe that it rhymes with no public service or reduction of employment, must be seen clearly. The United States be able to privatize funding agencies such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac which monopolize 90% of the mortgage

The consumption tax is to be handled with caution: we are not far from reaching a crisis level in indirect taxation. It is a disguised form of lower purchasing power. If the consumer no longer buys it and the entire growth of the economy seizing up. We will make next year the painful experience. The United States has not this lever: the consumption taxes are levied as a “sales tax” that belong to the States and not the federal government.