Tuesday, January 31st, 2012
It would make sense that recent signs of recovering economy would be great news for jobless Americans. But as a report on public polling explains, even though the overall economic picture may be brightening, many job seekers are still very much in the midst of a stark economic haze.
According to a report from The Huffington Post’s Janell Ross, “Economic data suggests the long-stagnant economy may finally be gaining momentum, but Americans aren’t seeing a turnaround yet, according to a pair of newly released polls. The economy — and more specifically the nation’s persistent jobs crisis — remains the number one concern for most Americans, according to a CNN/ORC International poll released Friday.…
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Saturday, December 17th, 2011
If you’re like many beleaguered and over-budgeted Americans, you grew weary and wary of credit card debt during the throes of the Great Recession.
The Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009 (Credit CARD Act) was supposed to address the fact that you’ve been “paying” with plastic both literally and metaphorically ways for years, shielding average Americans from unexpected and massive changes to their credit card terms—terms that had previously led directly to financial hardship for an overwhelming amount of our nation’s families.
Fast Forward to 2011 when new legislation is actually worsening many of the gains from the Credit CARD Act, by tightening federal regulations on debit card usage and causing banks to push their credit card offers to supplement lost debit income.…
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Thursday, September 8th, 2011
A fascinating new article from The Associated Press reveals that the one of the toughest challenges facing unemployed Americans isn’t a job market currently stagnated at 9.1 percent unemployment rate, or even that 14 million unemployed are competing with each other in a country that posted no new jobs in August; rather the AP says the most challenging thing the unemployed are currently contending with is the underemployed.
Underemployed workers, 8.8 million other people not counted as unemployed, but rather part-timers who want full-time work, will be first in line for more hours when the consumer spending picks up this holiday season, negating the need for most employers to add jobs—positions that so many jobless Americans are relying on to make it out of their own Great Recession.…
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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.…
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Wednesday, July 27th, 2011
This week, Citigroup will launch a brand, spanking new credit card that purportedly carries with a trifecta of post-recessionary perks: no late fees, no penalty rates and a single interest rate for purchases, balance transfers and cash advances.
As reported by The Associated Press, Citi’s revamped “Simplicity card” sells itself as exactly that: it will be marketed to those who are “juggling busy schedules” and “want a credit card with simple terms.” In fact, Jud Linville, CEO of Citi Cards told the AP, “It lets them not have to worry that they’re going to be late on a payment. It provides some flexibility.”
But amid Citi’s claims that their new card is somehow different than the plastic that has placed so many an American budget in financial jeopardy over the past several years, there are many reasons to think twice before sending in an application for their Simplicity.…
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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.…
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Saturday, March 12th, 2011
By now we know that “paying” with plastic is both a literal and metaphorical proposition, especially as a good number of bankruptcy bound individuals—even in an era of home-made foreclosure filings and mounting medical bills—find credit card debt to blame for their insolvency.
The Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009 (Credit CARD Act), signed into law by President Obama on May 22, 2009, was meant to change much of that. Signaling a new era of consumer protection, the so-called CARD Act was intended to shield average Americans from unexpected and massive changes to their credit card terms—terms that had previously led directly to financial hardship for an overwhelming amount of our nation’s families.…
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Friday, March 11th, 2011
If you’re like many average Americans, you were dealt a hefty budgetary blow during the recent Recession. And, as a result, you may have responded by trying to spend less, save more and reduce debts where you could—including cuts in your consumer credit card use.
If so, you’re not alone.
According to a recent report from Credit.com, since the inception of the economic crisis, more and more men and women are resisting the urge to spend, climbing aboard the equivalent of the “Good Ship Spendthrift” in order to create a sea of savings on a new course to a better financial future.…
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Wednesday, December 8th, 2010
A program designed to help American homeowners stay afloat during the tsunami of foreclosures is starting to take on water, according to a committee of Washington Republicans assigned to overseeing White House programs.
Announced not long after it became readily apparent that a major national financial crisis was at hand, the Obama Administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP, offered mortgage lenders financial incentive for restructuring customers’ payment plans. Many people enrolled with the hope that it would divert the fast moving flood of sub-prime mortgage failures. It served as only a temporary levy, however, as a large percentage of participants became entangled in nets of poorly organized processes, confusing paperwork and uninformed staff.…
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Tuesday, October 5th, 2010
While many of us were reading the Sunday paper, sitting in our various places of worship or otherwise relaxing and enjoying the weekend, Austan Goolsbee, Obama’s chief economic adviser, was telling Christiane Amanpour of ABC’s “This Week” that unemployment in the United States is “going to stay high.”
“This recession is the deepest in our lifetimes, the deepest since 1929,” said Goolsbee, who was just appointed chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers.
“More than 8 million people lost their jobs. It’s going to take a significant push on our part — and time — before that comes down,” he said.…
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Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
There was a time when a college diploma carried the promise of long, prosperous employment. Today, it’s as promising as a one of those silly motivational pictures of eagles and mountains.
As most people are coming to realize, it doesn’t matter how many initials are attached to the end of your name, you stand about as much chance as finding work today as the guy holding a sign at the intersection.
Earlier this week, President Obama stood in front the press corp and verbalized what everyone in America already knew: that far too many people are still out of work. As a result, foreclosures continue and personal bankruptcies are commonplace.…
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Saturday, February 13th, 2010
In this era of extreme homeowner hardship, mounting medical bills, and surging unemployment, most people use their credit cards—for better or for worse—just to get by. But, as everyone knows, there’s a price to pay for playing with plastic, including, over recent years, soaring interest rates, diminishing card disclosures, and a general lack of lender and credit card company transparency.
Well, now a hint of positive consumer news is just on the horizon. In addition to a few provisions enacted in August 2009 signifying a new era of consumer protection law, as of February 22, 2010, even more sweeping changes are set to occur in an effort to right several of the most basic wrongs credit card companies have increasingly imposed upon card holders.…
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Friday, February 12th, 2010
The Making Home Affordable program was designed to be the savior of the crashing real estate economy. People nationwide were taking solace in the President’s effort to save our homes and lead us through the worst economic situation our country has faced in almost 100 years. Hundreds of thousands of homeowners facing foreclosure due to the bubble bursting on a plague of poorly schemed sub-prime mortgages rejoiced in what seemed to be a cooperative effort on the part of the a supportive new Washington administration and the Wall Street.
Unfortunately, the program has landed far from expectations. The foreclosure rate has seen only minor blips in decline and it has become difficult to hear government officials even address the existence of the program, unless to defend it.…
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Sunday, January 31st, 2010
As the mortgage crisis continues on, ironically, President Obama seemed right at home at the podium during his 2010 State of the Union address just as millions of Americans face losing their home. As a result, many concerned citizens sought in the President’s national address any signs not only of “hope” or “change”—expressions made famous during his campaign days—but also second year specifics about what a new year would mean for the millions of average Americans, just like them, facing imminent foreclosure.
In that address, the President laid out an ambitious agenda attempting to attack one specific problem from every conceivable angle: the terrible economic squeeze on America’s middle class. One portion of his plan mentioned helping Americans stay in their homes, retain their home’s value or absolve home debt, as the President works to “lift the value of a family’s single largest investment.”
President Obama revealed he intends to “step up” programs that encourage re-financing for affordable mortgages.…
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Saturday, August 29th, 2009
Several months ago, in the heart of the recession with no recognizable signs of clotting in America’s collective financial blood loss, the government passed on a bill to allow millions of shaky mortgages to be subject to struggling homeowners’ bankruptcy petitions. Known as the Cramdown Bill, it would have given bankruptcy judges the right to modify, or “cramdown” mortgage terms, such as interest rates and principal balances, as part of the approval of a personal bankruptcy plan. The banking lobby launched a heavy campaign to defeat the cramdown provision, leaving families with limited options to save their homes.
Said Dick Durbin (D-Ill), “After two years of efforts that rely on banks to volunteer to rework mortgages, it is time to admit that the programs that have been put in place thus far to ease the crisis are clearly not working.…
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Thursday, August 6th, 2009
The month of July 2009 saw yet another increase in the number of consumer bankruptcies filed in the U.S., as low employment and high consumer debt continues to be a toxic combination throughout most of the country with only little signs that an antidote can be found. The number of filings, 126,434, was a 34.3 percent increase from the same month in 2009 and 8.7 percent increase from June, 2009.
Most experts agree that the rapidly decreasing number of jobs is in direct correlation with the consistent increases in bankruptcies every month. Also contributing to the increase is the so-far ineffective Home Affordable Modification Program.…
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Wednesday, July 8th, 2009
The bankruptcies of General Motors and Chrysler have created a buzz in bankruptcy law circles because of their rapid movement through the court system. The sale of GM was formally approved on July 5, marking the nation’s birthday by giving court approval to one of its favorite corporate sons.
Both the GM and Chrysler bankruptcies sped through the courts in under 45 days with the help of sell-off strategies largely orchestrated by the US government. Countless legal professionals did not think this sort of time-frame was possible, especially with companies as complex as two of the world’s largest car manufacturers. As a result, law students nationwide will have a new topic of study come next semester.…
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