Consolidating Your Debt May Help You In A Tough Economy
An economic crisis is gripping the world as of the end of 2008. Families around the world are squeezed and finding it increasingly difficult to meet their obligations. In order to provide a home for their family, transportation to get them around, a means to a better education and nice products for personal enjoyment, many families will extend additional debt beyond their means to pay them back.
Individual loans each carry a regular percentage of interest on top of the loans that must be paid back in addition to the loan amount. For example, if you purchase a new car for $20,000, typically there is a monthly interest rate of around 1-6 percent added on top of the principal. In essence, you are not paying back just the $20,000 but an additional premium on top of that for interest.
So we continue to use easy credit as our means of getting by as if we could continue doing that forever, eventually getting by more and more by making minimum payments. All of a sudden we have a ton of debt and are trying unsuccessfully to pay for things we purchased long ago. This is where debt consolidation can be the answer to a seemingly unsolvable problem.
There are a few different options for acquiring debt consolidation help, although the most common tends to be debt consolidation loans, whereby the consumer will take out one loan to pay all outstanding credit card/other debts. Doing this combines all the interest into a basis of one loan amount, thereby (in most cases) reducing the overall monthly obligation for the consumer.
Other alternatives exist for debt consolidation help, mainly circumstances where you can negotiate the amount of your debt down by a certain percentage to help pay off the obligation through a third party intermediary. There are also circumstances where you can negotiate to have the interest reduced based on income and ability to pay back the debt, again through an intermediary and with meeting certain qualifications.
The structure of the consolidation is key, meaning that whichever consolidation loan or strategy you go with you need to be careful about how it is backed up. For example, third parties might seek to tie the repayment of debt obligations to the deed for your home.
In this circumstance, if you fail to repay the loan then the lender has the right to take your house. Tread carefully with any structure that is backed by your home and be sure that you can afford the pay back agreement.
Finally, it is critical to ensure you are well positioned to pay off any restructuring agreement through a solid monthly budget of your income and expenses. If you do not have sufficient income to meet the repayment terms then you will likely default on the consolidation loan and lose out on opportunities to improve in the future. Use a solid budget, proceed with caution and restructure your debt when appropriate to fix your families finances.
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Tags: debt consolidation, Personal finance, money, debt management