Saturday, January 21st, 2012
Amid encouraging job figures that the private sector is surging, it’s important to take a second look at the sad state of the so-called “American Dream.”
In a new article, the New York Times does just that, finding that “Americans enjoy less economic mobility than their peers in Canada and much of Western Europe. The mobility gap has been widely discussed in academic circles, but a sour season of mass unemployment and street protests has moved the discussion toward center stage.”
A major reason for this upward mobility issue is rooted deep into the results of the recent Recession: more people, are more poor than they’ve ever been, meaning younger generations, including our nation’s children, have farther to climb to get out of poverty.…
Filed under: Benefits of Bankruptcy, Realizing there is a problem, The Bankruptcy Newsroom, The bankruptcy option, Warning signs, Who should file? | Comments Off
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.…
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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.…
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Tuesday, July 12th, 2011
It’s been two years since experts signaled the end of our recent Great Recession. But based on the most recent job report, it seems like only yesterday. In fact, according to last week’s surprisingly dismal government labor figures for June, a true recovery from the economic downturn of the late 2000s could be a long way off indeed.
A new article from The Huffington Post, in collaboration with Patch.com interprets the data, finding:
“Economists had anticipated the report would show about 120,000 private sector jobs added to the economy in June — barely enough to keep pace with population growth.…
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Monday, February 7th, 2011
When asked in a recent interview by Anna Robertson of Yahoo! News what he had to say to America’s 14.5 million unemployed, the Vice President Joe Biden responded, “hang in there.” Pointing to a slow and gradual national recovery, Biden said that while the unemployment rate is only “dropping minimally,” the economy is slowly improving, leaving Americans to wait it out. “A significant portion of the companies out there … are saying now that they’re gonna begin to hire this year,” he said. “The message is hang in there, things are coming back.”
While millions of hopeful men and women attempt to heed the Vice President’s advice and wait for things to return to pre-recessionary “normality,” the realities of the current economic malaise are bleaker.…
Filed under: Benefits of Bankruptcy, Decision to file, Getting into debt, Introduction to and purpose of the blog, Saving Your Home, The Bankruptcy Newsroom, The bankruptcy option, Who should file? | No Comments »
Tuesday, January 11th, 2011
As we reported last week, 2010 marked a breaking point for many Americans who had managed to stay afloat during the height of our country’s financial meltdown as long-term unemployment and continued woes for a struggling housing market forced more than 1.5 million men and women to file for personal bankruptcy last year. This figure represents a total 9% increase from 2009 as well as a five-year high following the passage of stricter federal bankruptcy laws in 2005.
And while according to the National Bankruptcy Research Center, the highest filing rates were concentrated in the Southwest and the Southeast, The Wall Street Journal’s chart, comparing state by state 2010 personal bankruptcy filings with the previous year, reveals that the largest increases in bankruptcy cut across the country as “Southern states such as Tennessee, South Carolina, North Carolina, Alabama and Kentucky posted declines in the number of bankruptcies recorded last year.…
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Monday, December 20th, 2010
Question: When can an $11 medical bill mean bankruptcy?
Answer: When the bill is issued in error and the resultant collection proceedings drop your credit score to the point where you can’t get a credit card to help pay the bills, apply for a car loan that helps you get to work, or even refinance your mortgage to a more affordable rate.
Think it can’t happen to you? Think again.
In a recent article written by The Wall Street Journal, entitled “Hidden Medical Debt Trips Up Homeowners,” the prestigious paper covers several instances among millions of others in which miniscule past due medical bills had been turned over to collection agencies, resulting in a more than 50 point drop in the debtors’ credit scores.…
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Wednesday, August 18th, 2010
With many experts predicting a protracted economic malaise with imperceptible growth and stubbornly high joblessness, bankruptcy filings appear to be in true recession-era form, rising in recent months, and, according to many analysts, increasing with no end in sight. In fact, during early summer, the American Bankruptcy Institute (ABI) validated these fears, reporting that personal bankruptcy filings increased in 2010 compared with only one year ago.
As bankruptcy figures continue to rise, many critics are charging insolvent Americans—seeking shelter from personal bankruptcy—as being responsible for raising interest rates, cutting consumer confidence and retail sales, and outfoxing creditors while other, less indebted Americans are required to pick up the slack…and the tab. In reality, though, Americans who have filed for bankruptcy are in many ways saving all of us money. And you could too, while also saving yourself years of bills, harassment and stress.…
Filed under: Benefits of Bankruptcy, Common pre-filing mistakes, Dealing with debt collectors, Deciding who should file, Decision to file, Realizing there is a problem, Saving Your Home, The bankruptcy option | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 24th, 2010
In this economy, qualifying for a bank loan or line of credit can feel impossible—even for people with perfect credit—and much more so if you’re trying to bounce back from a recent bankruptcy. But a bit of patience (targeting smaller community banks rather than large corporate banks) and a bit of help (getting others to vouch for you) can improve your odds tremendously—even in this uncertain economic climate.
As Robert C. Seiwert, senior vice-president of the Center for Commercial Lending & Business Banking at the American Bankers Association told Businessweek, “A bankruptcy can hurt your chances of getting new credit for at least seven years.…
Filed under: Avoiding the same mistakes, Life after bankruptcy, Rebuilding credit, The bankruptcy option, Your business & bankruptcy | Comments Off
Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009
Even in these tough economic times, everyone wants their family and friends to have a nice holiday—full of fun, frivolity and festive giving. And, even if you find yourself among the millions considering bankruptcy in the New Year, you may believe, now more than ever, that it’s open [holiday] season to shop for pricey presents using problem credit cards. In fact, many Americans do charge up expensive tabs in the months preceding the Christmas season when anticipating a bankruptcy—hoping to secure some great gifts prior to wiping away these same debts, along with many others, in January or February.
However, it’s never been more important to avoid a holiday spending binge when seeking this fresh financial start.…
Filed under: Benefits of Bankruptcy, Common pre-filing mistakes, Exemptions, Filing process, Getting into debt, Qualifying for bankruptcy, The bankruptcy option | Comments Off
Sunday, October 4th, 2009
The current administration would love to perpetuate the common belief that most personal bankruptcies are the result of ruinous medical bills. News articles cite numerous studies and statistics that support this theory. But is it really true?
The “recent” Harvard study that has been bandied about lately as proof that the broken US healthcare system is behind the majority of personal bankruptcies was originally published in 2005, five years ago, and was based on data collected in 2001. The study states that “about half of people filing for bankruptcy said health care expenses, illness or related job-loss led them to do so.” Politicians and the media are fond of attributing the “about half” statistic solely to health care expenses as a cause of bankruptcy, as in “about half of all bankruptcies are caused by medical bills.”
In the study, the actual percentage of respondents who indicated that medical issues were a significant factor in declaring bankruptcy was 46.2.…
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Friday, August 7th, 2009
This may come as a surprise to some, and huge relief to others: bankruptcy can be filed by one spouse without the other. The big question is: SHOULD you file without your spouse? Like most aspects of bankruptcy, the answer will depend on your particular situation.
Resorting to declaring bankruptcy can be a source of nervousness, fear, and you may be genuinely concerned about keeping your filing private. Many people contemplating filing want to be reassured that their bankruptcy won’t be published in the newspaper, that their employer won’t have to know, that in-laws won’t be informed, their kids don’t have to know, their kids’ teachers, their pet groomer, their neighbors … etc.…
Filed under: Deciding who should file, Decision to file, Marriage and Debt, Who should file? | Comments Off
Saturday, August 1st, 2009
The good news is that the California legislature finally passed a budget (including millions of dollars of budget cuts), and, we assume, will no longer be issuing IOU’s to its vendors in lieu of real US dollars. The bad news, is that the state’s financial problems are far from being over and that many of the cuts, not to mention its increasing unemployment rate and mortgage crisis, will affect the quality of people’s lives in the state for many years to come. Unfortunately, more state and local governments around the rest of the country are finding themselves in similar situations: as of February, Illinois was broke, too.…
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Friday, July 10th, 2009
While details of super-sized corporate failures, like GM and Chrysler, are being splashed across front pages of newspapers and websites, grabbing our attention and garnering an inordinate amount of debate, the reality is that the vast majority of commercial bankruptcies are filed by entrepreneurs and small-business owners. The first five months of this year have shown a 52% increase in the total number of commercial bankruptcy filings. On average, during the first six months of 2009, some 350 commercial enterprises file for bankruptcy daily — an increase of 240% from 2006, the first year after the bankruptcy law was changed.
Today’s economic landscape has proven to be especially toxic to small business owners.…
Filed under: Benefits of Bankruptcy, Life after bankruptcy, The Bankruptcy Newsroom, The bankruptcy option, Uncategorized, Who should file?, Your business & bankruptcy | No Comments »
Thursday, June 11th, 2009
Some 330,477 people filed bankruptcy between January and March of this year. Do the math. That’s an average of more than 110,000 filings per month, 27,500 per month, and just shy of 1,000 per day. These numbers are up ten percent over last quarter, and 35 percent from a year ago. Indeed, more than 1.2 million people filed bankruptcy between March 2008 and March 2009. The spikes in filing rates are the highest since the fourth quarter of 2005, when record numbers of Americans rushed to file bankruptcy before Congress enacted tougher bankruptcy laws. California saw the worst of it this past quarter, weighing in with a total of almost 43,000 filings.…
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Monday, June 1st, 2009
Your “Golden Years†are supposed to be the best time of your life. You shouldn’t be worrying about bills, going to work, or holding an “upside-down†mortgage. These years are supposed to be the fruit of your life’s labor, and you should be able to enjoy them – or least not have to juggle the kinds of responsibilities and concerns you did in your 20’s and 30’s. Until recently, with a modest amount of planning and investment toward retirement, this was a reachable goal for most Americans.
Sadly, the economic conditions of the last 10 to 15 years have increasingly strained the budgets of seniors.…
Filed under: Decision to file, Getting into debt, Making an appointment, Realizing there is a problem, Who should file? | Comments Off
Monday, May 4th, 2009
Last year saw stratospheric numbers of bankruptcy filings. Almost 1.1 million people filed for bankruptcy in 2008. That was a 33 percent increase from 2007, when around 800,000 people filed, and even more from the year before, when some 590,000 people sought bankruptcy protection. During the first 10 months of 2008 alone, an average of more than 4,000 people per day filed cases. This spike in filings was in direct response to the current economic downturn, which has landed on the doorstep of millions of hardworking individuals doing their best to make ends meet.
The downturn continues and is working its way deeper and deeper into the economy.…
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Sunday, April 12th, 2009
Are you struggling with debt and considering bankruptcy? It helps to know that you’re not alone. According to the National Bankruptcy Research Center, almost 1.1 million people filed for bankruptcy in 2008. That’s up 33 percent from 2007, when around 800,000 people filed, and even more from the year before, when some 590,000 people sought bankruptcy protection. In fact, during the first 10 months of 2008, an average of more than 4,000 people per day filed cases. And the number of filings is expected to increase even further in 2009. This spike in filings over the last few years is in direct response to the current economic downturn, which has landed on the doorstep of millions of hardworking individuals who had been doing their best to make ends meet.…
Filed under: Benefits of Bankruptcy, Deciding who should file, Decision to file, Saving Your Home, Who should file? | Comments Off