May 10th, 2010 Posted in finance | no comment »
You may be surprised to learn that some credit agreements from the banks are unenforceable in one way or another.
The Consumer Credit Act of 1974 insists upon strict terms and conditions that must be written into the contract that you have signed. For example, the interest rates must be clearly stated and correctly calculated, and often this is simply not the case. In some cases these agreements aren’t even signed!
You can write off your debts on anything from credit cards, credit card fees, secured and unsecured loans, credit card charges, store cards to your mortgage, and the payment protection insurance plan or PPI.
If you took out any kind of credit finance agreement or loan before April 2007 you might be able to have the debt written off completely and legally by using a solicitor on a no win no fee basis.
Get your solicitor to request a copy of the credit agreement from your lender. This agreement will then be closely audited to see if it does in fact comply with the 1974 Consumer Credit Act. If breaches are found in the credit agreement, it may be unenforceable.
You don’t have to do anything. The solicitor will write to the lender on your behalf. Depending on how long your credit company take to respond to the request for the documentation, the process will take about nine months to a year
For far too long banks and credit card companies have taken their customers to the cleaners, charging ridiculous rates and exorbitant fees for late payments, reducing the credit limit so the customer now has exceeded their allowed limit and then charging another fee. On top of this, we pay even more yearly fees for the “privilege” of having one of their credit cards.
Use the law to write off debts and restart your life debt free, and free from the day to day worry that you can’t pay your bills.It’s your turn to see if you can write off your debts. It could save you thousands of pounds.
These options may be useful if you find your agreements are not unenforceable. This is not an IVA (Individual Voluntary Arrangement)debt management, or bankruptcy. Debt management companies offer excellent and confidential advice to help you with debt and debt management of all kinds. Stop worrying and call today for peace of mind.
Why not check out unenforceable agreements expert for more information on wiping out your debts. Ashton Field’s site has a choice of many claims companies to help you. unenforceable agreements
Tags: bankruptcy, business finance, debt, debt management, debt management plans, family finance, finance, iva, unenforceable agreements, unenforceable credit card agreements, unenforceable finance agreements
Sep 27th, 2009 Posted in insurance | no comment »
by Meg Brown
If you want to thicken the air in any given room these days, bring up the subject of national health care reform. Opinions and emotions are guaranteed to fuel a heated conversation while at the same time some key issues are often left out of the informal debate. It is hard to blame participants for these oversights because of the subject’s extreme complexity. But the bottom line remains that this is a subject our country needs to intelligently tackle before it bankrupts us.
Many individual Americans have in fact already tasted from the bitter cup of personal bankruptcy brought on by devastating brushes with the health care system as it exists now. The American Journal of Medicine released study findings this summer that uncovered the extent of medically related causes that lay behind personal bankruptcy filings in 2007. The AJM study authors implemented conservative controls on their work, ensuring a random sample of bankruptcy filers nationwide and followed up with in depth interviews with a significant cross section of participants. This study, a first ever of its kind due to its broad sampling and well defined parameters, revealed that nearly a whopping 62% of these filers indicated medically related expenses as major contributing factors to their debt disaster.
Steffie Woolhandler, M.D., one of the study’s authors, appeared in a CNN interview saying “If an illness is long enough and expensive enough, private insurance offers very little protection against medical bankruptcy, and that is the major finding in our study.” As a counterbalance Dr. Woolhandler’s bracing conclusions, the nonpartisan policy research foundation, the Center for Studying Health System Change, voiced mild skepticism of the study’s weighting of medical causes for bankruptcies. But they also offered little comfort with their statistic that 1 in 5 American families are “unduly strained” by medical bills.
It is hard to fathom the aggressive rise in medical costs and their burden on families in the past 30 years. 1981 statistics indicate that only 8% of personal bankruptcy filings were in the aftermath of medical crisis. (These numbers were extracted from court records which did not indicate the origin of debt handled by collection agencies.) In 2001 findings, the number of medically related bankruptcies had jumped to 46%. In the short gap of 6 years, the American Journal of Medicine’s findings for 2007 rose to nearly 62%. What the numbers will be after the effects of the current economic recession are tallied gives reason for pause.
There is often a common misunderstanding about the majority of individuals who must file for bankruptcy; it is that they are society’s shiftless or hapless members. The AMJ study indicates a profile of personal bankruptcy filers that is quite different from this perception. Most debtors in their random sample were middle aged, among the middle class and had gone to college. 75% of filers did have medical insurance at the outset of their health and debt problems. However, they had the norm of coverage gaps such as co-payments, deductibles and uncovered services. This brings up the unavoidable correlation of how 25% of insurance companies nationwide cancel coverage immediately when an individual suffers a disabling illness and another 25% of insurance companies rescind policies within one year.
It is hard to ignore that the middle class’ back is being gradually broken under the weight of the current insurance system. Health insurance premiums skyrocket every six months and deductibles on most policies follow a similar skyward pattern annually. Proponents of the American Dream have traditionally contended that what is bad for the middle class is bad for the nation as a whole. Currently, it is estimated that the U.S. will spend 17.6% of its GDP (Gross Domestic Product) on health care in 2009. The future holds an ever upward spiral if reforms are not soon brought into play. A further consideration of this staggering GDP statistic is to realize that it does not and cannot take into account all the associated costs that medically related bankruptcy of individuals or small businesses impose on the economy and society.
Responsible citizens owe it to themselves to review this American Journal of Medicine study in its entirety and to engage in further health care reform fact finding. A brief online search at amjmed.com (Vol.122, Issue 8, pp. 741 to 746) will get you started. Let your opinions be fully informed and get in touch with your elected representatives. This is an important national subject that requires vision and a patriotic, nonpartisan commitment to our future.
Tags: family finance, family health, health care, health care reform, health insurance, health insurance cancellation, insurance, medical bankruptcy, medical bills, personal bankruptcy