Archive for the 'Benefits of Bankruptcy' Category

Employers Continue to Discriminate Against Jobless Workers

Sunday, September 4th, 2011

If you’re unemployed you have a ton to worry about.

Past due bills, mounting debts, going without health insurance, possible repossession of your car or foreclosure of your home, are just some of the not-so-pleasant thoughts plaguing the millions of average Americans facing extended joblessness.

Unfortunately, now there’s one more concern to add to the job market meltdown mix: a new report by the National Employment Law Project has found that employers are continuing to discriminate against unemployed people in their online job ads despite increased scrutiny surrounding the nation’s hiring practices.

According to a new report by The Huffington Post, “The jobs crisis is far from over: As of June, nearly 6.3 million U.S.…

North Carolina, One of Ten States With Largest Job Gaps

Sunday, September 4th, 2011

About a year ago, we reported that North Carolina was at the “top of the heap,” when it came to being home to one of the ten best cities to find jobs. Despite the fact that millions of struggling Americans were still working hard to find employment, economists were heartened about prospects for growth in 2012 as industries increasingly reported better profits and adding new jobs. As a result, back then, cities like Durham, N.C., which had rebounded with more jobs post-recession based on gains in the tech industries, looked like beacons of hope for a new economic recovery.

But now we’re forced to fast-forward to 2011, and Friday’s news that the United States failed to add any jobs in August.…

No, Nothing, Nada: American Adds Zero Jobs in August

Saturday, September 3rd, 2011

As things heat up in the waning days of summer, the job growth cooled down in August, with the U.S. economy picking up [read my lips:] no new jobs in August as the unemployment rate stayed steady at 9.1 percent. These figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Friday now stand as the most clear and present symbol yet of a stalled economic recovery that has the words “double-dip recession” written all over it.

According to a new report from The Huffington Post, Wells Fargo economist John Silvia doesn’t believe the United States is currently in a recession now, but  he “wouldn’t be surprised if the economy enters into a recession in the near future.…

Ten Signs the Double Dip Recession Has Dug In, Part Two.

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

As we said in Part One of this series, a double-dip refers to a recession, followed by a short-lived recovery, followed by another recession. And there are plenty of signs that this second coming of an economic downturn has officially arrived in America, including the fact that our Gross Domestic Product has only expanded by 1.3%, while consumer spending is up a mere .1% in the second quarter of 2011. Add to that the fact that the national debt, and Congress’s current stalemate to raise it, is only exacerbating the U.S.’s economic problems.

So, let’s assume the U.S. has entered another recession—as shown in Part One, it’s probably not as bad as the first.  But try telling that to the many Americans who do not believe that the 2007-2009 downturn ever even ended.…

American Retirees Disinterested in Low Interest Rates

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Historically low interest rates haven’t really reaped the kind of benefits they normally would in a post-recessionary period. In reality, economic growth has stagnated, the real estate market remains in the gutter, and consumer confidence has yet to recover to pre-recessionary levels.

But bargain-basement interest is also having unintended effects, including what the Associated Press called “killing savers”—like retirees and others who depend on interest income. In turn, the Federal Reserve’s low-rate policies may actually be hurting the country’s economic prospects, reducing the income of these “savers” by some 27 percent in the last three years, and therefore decreasing the amount they can pump back into U.S.…

Nobel Laureate Forecasts Global Economic Recession

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Are you buying forecasts of an economic recovery? Don’t believe another global recession is possible? Just ask Michael Spence, professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business and winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in economics. Recently, Professor Spence told Bloomberg Television Wednesday that there’s “probably a 50 percent” chance of the global economy slipping into recession.

The notion of the United States reverting back into another recession has been on the minds of many economists throughout 2011. But Prof. Spence forecasts that any measurable economic downturn here at home would likely spread like wildfire throughout the rest of the world.…

Consumer Bankruptcies Fall in First Half of 2011, But Bankruptcy Needs Remain

Monday, August 15th, 2011

Some are calling a recent drop in consumer bankruptcies during the first half of 2011 a sure sign that the tides may finally be turning for the U.S. economy, as these new figures from the American Bankruptcy Institute Americans fuel the idea that American may be more financially stable in 2011 than they were at the same time last year.

According to the new data, consumer bankruptcy filings across the country totaled 709,303 during the first six months of 2011, a full eight percent less than the 770,117 filed during the same period in 2010. What’s more, using data provided by the National Bankruptcy Research Center, the ABI reported that there were 11,768 consumer bankruptcy petitions filed in June 2011, a five percent decrease from the number filed in June 2010.…

U.S. Credit Downgrade Ramps Up Fears of Another Recession

Monday, August 15th, 2011

U.S. Credit Downgrade Ramps Up Fears of Another Recession

Standard and Poor’s recent downgrade of U.S. government debt is capturing headlines across the country and around the world. And with the major agency’s actions to cut the United States government’s top credit rating, financial experts and commentators are finding themselves increasingly concerned that the American economy is headed back into another economic downturn.

According to a new repot from The Huffington Post, “The announcement that the rating agency had reduced the U.S. government’s AAA rating for the first time in history came after days of punishing declines in the stock market, and has now cast a shadow over economic prospects in the months ahead.…

Soldiers Struggle to Find Work at Home as War Winds Down, But Find Solutions in Bankruptcy

Friday, August 12th, 2011

As active duty service members come home from wars winding down abroad in Iraq and Afghanistan, they are welcomed to friends, family and staggering unemployment. Now, tens of thousands of veterans are flooding the job market at a time when millions of civilians can’t even head back to work.

According to a new report from Reuters, unemployment among recent veterans grew to 13.3 percent in June, more than 4 percentage points higher than the national average. “From 2008 to 2010, that rate rose from 7.3 percent to 11.5 percent, and it’s expected to climb further as more troops come home this year — 10,000 from Afghanistan and, unless Iraq requests some to stay, the remaining 46,000 from that country.…

Experts (and Debtors) Believe the Economic Recovery Never Happened

Tuesday, August 9th, 2011

Are you buying forecasts that we’re in a slow-but-steady economic recovery?

Well some believe the economic recovery never actually happened.

Just ask Nobel Prize winning economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman. On the heels of the recent debt ceiling crisis, 600-point plunge in the Dow Jones industrial average and the drop in interest rates to near-record lows, Krugman warns that the United States economy was never truly ‘on the road to recovery.’

As Krugman writes in this week’s New York Times, “It’s not just that the threat of a double-dip recession has become very real. It’s now impossible to deny the obvious, which is that we are not now and have never been on the road to recovery.…

When 117,000 Isn’t a lot

Monday, August 8th, 2011

In this new “rough and tumble” economic era, 117,000 sounds like a lot.

$117,000 dollars. 117,000 shares of stock. 117,000 jobs?

Well, in all but one of those cases, you’d be right. In July, the American economy beat expectations by adding 117,000 new jobs to the current market and dropping the unemployment rate from 9.2 to 9.1%.

But what was truly great about this news of six-digit job growth was that it well eclipsed the paltry figures of positions added only one month earlier in June. Back then, economists had anticipated the June report would show about 120,000 private sector jobs added to the economy — barely enough to keep pace with population growth.…

Debt Stress on the Rise as the Economic Forecast Gets Stormier

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011

In the two years since the end of America’s recent Great Recession, there have been plenty of ups and downs in economic forecasts, fiscal prognostications, and financial facts and figures. Polls have also been a big part of taking the country’s financial pulse, as average Americans are often asked, “how are you feeling now, post-recession?”

Some experts will tell you that as recently as last fall—with news that businesses were back to hiring, some saying the housing market was no longer in a tailspin, and the economy looking less bleak than before—men and women throughout the country were beginning to feel better about their personal financial prospects.…

Finally: “$0 Money-Down” Bankruptcy

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

Need to file bankruptcy or think you might? Then, you will be interested in this.

The Law Offices of John T. Orcutt is offering to get people filed for “$0 Money Down”. That’s right, “$0 Money-Down”. No upfront fees. No upfront costs.

Just for the record, this is not a loan and “no credit is needed” because this plan pulls on the power of Chapter 13 of the U.S. Federal Bankruptcy Code. Chapter 13 is one of the 2 major chapters of the Bankruptcy Code under which most consumers generally file.

If filing bankruptcy is right for you and if you qualify for “$0 Money-Down” (and lots of people can), you can get your bankruptcy case filed for “$0 Money-Down”.…

Treasury Secretary Predicts “Hard Times For a Long Time to Come”

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

Just when the financial experts said it was safe to call the economy “in recovery,” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner says many Americans will face hard times for a long time to come.

Geithner reemphasized in an episode of “Meet the Press” that we remain in the midst of a very tough economy in which, for a lot of people, “it’s going to feel very hard, harder than anything they’ve experienced in their lifetime now, for a long time to come.” He also revealed that he believed  President Barack Obama has rescued the United States from a second Great Depression and will continue the hard work of trying to strengthen the economy.  Unfortunately, Geithner also predicted that it would be some time before many people actually feel like the country is recovering.…

Two Years Into an Economic Recovery, Consumer Confidence Plummets to Below Recessionary Levels

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011

In these rough and tumble economic times, cheery financial news can be hard to come by, even amid the economic recovery itself. This remains true at the midway point of 2011—a full two years following the official end of the economic recession—as a major indicator of the strength of the America’s economic machine is showing that we’re still in the throes of an economic downturn, at least for consumers.

According to Reuters, Global consumer confidence fell in the second quarter “to its lowest level in a year and a half as an uncertain economic outlook, a deepening euro zone debt crisis and rising inflation made people more cautious, a survey showed on Sunday.…

U.S. Consumer Credit Rose By $5 Billion In May, Marking New Realities for Consumers in Debt

Friday, July 15th, 2011

According to last week’s Federal Reserve report, U.S. consumer credit rose by another $5.08 billion in May–a figure that suggested a willingness for millions to keep borrowing despite an exceptionally tight job market.

In a recap of these new figures by Reuters, the news agency said, “The May rise, coming after a revised $5.67 billion increase in April, handily topped forecasts by Wall Street economists for a $4 billion increase and marked the eighth straight month of growth in consumer credit. The total of all consumer credit outstanding in May was $2.432 trillion, up from a total of $2.427 trillion in April.…

A Challenge to U.S. Bankruptcy Laws Could Open Doors for Gay Couples Seeking Federal Relationship Recognition

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

Recent gains for marriage equality in states like Iowa and New Hampshire have been met by a lot of legal questions for those who are actually considering marriage with their gay and lesbian partner. Confusing differences in relationship recognition amongst state and federal laws can create true legal challenges for same-sex couples throughout the country. These legal hurdles for gay and lesbian spouses include barriers when these couples seek the benefits of bankruptcy. Because the federal government crafts bankruptcy legislation and bankruptcy law is decided on the federal level—and yet, bankruptcy law is regulated on the state level—differences can emerge in the way cases are handled, especially where same-sex couples are involved.…

Are You One in a Million (1.4 Million to Be Exact)?

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

It seems like only yesterday that being termed “one in a million” was a good thing.

But that was apparently before the economic crisis.

Today, there are over one million Americans (1.4 million to be exact) who have been out of work for 99 weeks or longer. Deemed as the “very long-term unemployed,” this overflowing group of unfortunate unemployed workers tends to skew more mature, with little discrimination between those with (or without) a college education.

In fact, according to an article by The Huffington Post, “The CRS report shows that very long-term unemployment is more likely to afflict older workers than younger ones.…

How Will You Pay for Higher Education Expenses?

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

In these tough economic times, some households have had to put basic needs above plans for higher education, turning to personal savings and college funds to fight off foreclosure, meet mounting medical costs, and in some cases, even keep the lights on and food in the fridge. In the wake of the recent Recession, many commentators have begun to question the cost-benefit of analysis of spending for higher education versus the realities of the jobs (and salaries) earned as a result.

But according to a new Gallup/Sallie Mae study, despite tightening budgets and high unemployment, most students and their families are not cutting back on education.…

The Basics of Bankruptcy: Part One: An Introduction to Who, What & Why?

Friday, June 24th, 2011

If you’re like so many Americans experiencing tough economic times, you may feel completely overwhelmed by your current financial situation and unsure as to what options actually exist to alleviate it. Maybe you’ve been unable to modify your mortgage, hit with the costs of an unexpected medical situation, dealing with high interest credit cards or are navigating through the pitfalls of unemployment or underemployment with little understanding of how to pull yourself out of the subsequent a financial hole.

At times like these it’s often important to get “back to the basics,” separating fact from fiction in order to make an informed decision that can get you back on track for a better financial future.…