An Unhealthy New Trend in Health Care Costs

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

If it seems like it’s been a while since we’ve talked about the rising cost of health care, that’s because up until this year, these mounting medical costs had leveled.

But in the new America, it seems you can’t keep a high cost down.

In reality, the costs of employer-sponsored health insurance surged during 2011, cutting short a timely trend toward only “moderate growth.” According to a report released this week by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research and Educational Trust, annual premiums for family coverage climbed 9 percent and surpassed $15,000 for the first time. Premiums for single coverage rose 8 percent compared to 2010.…

Automated Debt Collection Lawsuits on the Rise

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

In this tough economy, it may seem like your creditors are an ever-present part of your life…showing up where and when you least expect, or need, them.  You’re not alone.  It turns out that millions of Americans have fallen behind on paying their bills, and an unfortunate result is that debt collection law firms are now heading to court in record numbers in order to collect.

In addition to this tough economy making past-due debtors out of many Americans, the rise in unprecedented debt collection cases is also being blamed on the wonder of automated debt collection.

According to a new The New York Times article by Andrew Martin, many debt collection law firms are now relying on “computer software to help prepare its cases.…

Creating a Barrier to Bill Collectors: Part 1 – Taking Back Your Power

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

In this tough economy, it may seem like your creditors are an ever-present part of your life…showing up where and when you least expect, or need, them. But creditors with real teeth (i.e., car lenders, mortgage holders, and landlords) don’t need to make harassing calls or threaten you in order to get what they want. They can just take your stuff: cars in default, homes in foreclosure, rentals in eviction. While bankruptcy can stop secured creditors cold, in the alternative, unsecured creditors, the ones at the bottom of the proverbial food chain, are more likely to be the ones contacting you via phone, sending you letters, and generally harassing you for cash, any cash, where and when they can.…

Food for Thought: Restaurants Recover from the Great Recession

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Could the food industry be the latest bellwether of a better economy and returning consumer confidence? Some industry experts seem to think so.

According to William Neuman’s report in his recent New York Times article, “The Tables Turn,” “Restaurants all over the country are beginning to see signs of a potential recovery after a dismal 2009. Sales at some restaurants have risen in the last few months, and the industry has hired thousands of additional workers.  “There’s no question about this,” said Harry Balzer, chief industry analyst at the NPD Group, a market research firm that tracks sales at 47 restaurant chains with a total of 103,000 outlets.…

Making Sense of Bankruptcy’s Means Test

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

The main thrust of 2005’s Bankruptcy Reform Act (unceremoniously known as “BARF”), is a bankruptcy deterrent called the “Means Test”—a formula for determining your ability to pay back your debts. Your inability to pass this test limits your options to filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy plan, which still discharges your unsecured debt, but takes longer to complete.

With March 2010 figures yielding the highest number of reported Chapter 7 bankruptcies since 2005 (the year the “Means Test,” caused a dramatic reduction in bankruptcy cases), the efficacy of this apparent obstacle to Chapter 7 protections may be of particular interest to many considering personal bankruptcy.…

A Shift for the Future: Unemployed Seeking Work Could Hit 26 Million

Friday, April 9th, 2010

While many economists say this decade’s Great Recession ended in the middle of 2009, millions of struggling Americans still working hard to find meaningful employment would definitely disagree…and now, the figures do too.

According to the latest U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics employment report, more than 40% of the nation’s 14.9 million unemployed workers have been out of a job for at least 27 weeks, with an average member of this beleaguered club having been unemployed for 29.7 weeks. For those keeping count, that’s nearly seven months.

And with each passing month, it becomes more and more clear that finding new jobs isn’t getting any easier, with leading economists speculating that not only is the nearly 10% unemployment rate not likely to fall anytime soon, but also that the actual number of workers seeking full-time jobs is on par to grow.…

Our Great Recession 2.0: No Free Lunches

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

If you’re reading this, odds are you’re considering bankruptcy. As such, you have a lot on your plate. Yet, what might make you feel a bit better about being bankruptcy bound is the knowledge that you’re not alone. Millions of average Americans just like you are facing desperate circumstances as they struggle to stay afloat in the wake of this decade’s Great Recession—facing foreclosure, job insecurity, rising costs and, of course, insolvency.  In the series, Our Great Recession 2.0, we’ll delve into some of the more unique stories of this decade’s unprecedented economic downturn, allowing you to see familiar faces and dire places people are going in order to handle the financial meltdown head-on.…

New Tax Credits Yield Higher Tax Refunds in 2010

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

As you know by now, this country’s recent Great Recession has dealt, and continues to deal, a significant blow to the budgets of many American families, leaving millions in debt, underwater in their mortgages, perpetually jobless and looking for any means necessary to get back on a financially-healthy track.

However, there may be a silver fiscal lining to this year’s spring season: The Recovery Act’s tax credits. Now we’re seeing that tax time—normally considered a harrowing economic experience for many Americans—is yielding it a bit of a reprieve for some cash-strapped citizens struggling to stay afloat amid rising education costs, mortgages, and even car payments.…

How New Health Care Reforms Can Affect Your Medical Debt

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

For all the political uncertainties about health care reform, at least one thing seems clear: when President Obama signed landmark health care legislation into law this week, it marked real changes for Americans facing medical debt.

And, as such, these changes couldn’t come at a better time. Even amid surging unemployment and mortgages underwater, health care expenses have become the primary financial breaking point for millions of Americans. According to a Harvard study recently reported in the LA Times, medical bills played a role in 62% of personal bankruptcies filed in 2007,  up 7% from 2001. Most striking, a vast majority (78%) of these Chapter 7 filers actually had health insurance.…