Friday, January 16, 2009

Start Living Frugally: The Frugal Lifestyle Part 1

Frugal: "economical in use or expenditure; prudently saving or sparing; not wasteful" - Dictionary.com

Learning to live frugally is an important aspect of any plan to get out of debt. It's also important to look for ways to increase your income, but increasing your income can be dependent on factors beyond your control. So a person with wisdom, as I hope you are, would find it prudent to have power over the factor most easily controlled: spending. Most people think that the expenditures they have are necessary. If you think all the money you spend is truly neccesary for your survival you are either one of the most frugal people ever to live, or you are in denial. If I were a betting man, I would wager that you are in denial.

It is more important than ever to live frugally in a time that is increasingly unstable, with rising cost of living, stagnant wages, corporate layoofs, compounding personal debt, and high medical bills on the rise in most american families, it would do for nearly any person reading this to start applying more frugality to their lives.

Mastering the art of living frugally makes it much easier to save money and meet financial goals. If you learn the many tricks of the trade you will also increase your income and financial freedom in prosperous times.

Living frugally is not about scarcity or fear. It is not about being a cheapskate. It's about being knowledegable about how to make your money go further than usual, controlling your impulses to buy indulgences you only want in the moment, and lowering your monthly expenses by purchasing according to value and neccessity.

You must learn the fine art of bargain hunting as well as the discipline and awareness to avoid junk that will break quickly. Do not purchase things just because they are cheap either! Many people go nuts when they see something for a low price and purchase it even if they have absolutely no use for it whatsoever because they are in a scaricity mindset. They are afraid to pass up a good sale because it might not come around again. This mindset is the reason the marketing tactic "Buy now I might raise the price at any time" is always effective. Even if you think your too smart to fall for that, you probably fall for it all the time, you just don't notice it.

Instead of simply spending all the money you make each week and making a meager unfocus attempt to pay off any debts you may have, it would be much more productive to start to PLAN a more frugal lifestyle. Do you have clothes, furniture, cars, restaurant meals etc. only because you have maxxed out credit cards? It's time to acknowledge your lack of planning and preperation instead of trying to maintain an illusion of financial prosperity.

Do not think to yourself, "I am a free man/woman, I earn my money and I have the right to spend it how i'd like to enjoy the fruits of my labor!". This sort of thinking is delusional. You are listening to the clamoring of your unconcious "monkey mind" to get whatever it desires right now, cost be damned! You rationalize your unconcious behavior with concious thought without ever fully acknowledging to yourself what you are really doing, even though you clearly do know the cost of your actions. By living without any financial plan and not learning to life frugally you not only deprive yourself of the things you TRULY want and NEED to satisfy impulse, but you fortify the bars of your financial prison. Learning to live frugally starts with a budget plan. Following your budget plan is to start to plan your escape from financial prison. By building a budget plan you are digging a tunnel out of the cold confinces of your cell of debt and check-to-check living, and moving toward the shining light of financial freedom.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Facts on Credit Card Debt. Crushing the American Dream.


"According to latest information gathered by the US Census bureau, there were 164 million credit cardholders in the United States in 2005 and that number is projected to grow to 176 million Americans by 2010." (Source: Money-Zine.com)

Americans have become more and more comfortable with credit cards and debt. We have been conditioned to believe it is normal, even necessary to get into debt, and use "credit" to pay for things.

"76 percent of undergraduates have credit cards, and the average undergrad has $2,200 in credit card. Additionally, they will amass almost $20,000 in student debt. "(Source: Nellie Mae, "Undergraduate Students and Credit Cards in 2004: An Analysis of Usage Rates and Trends")

Students come out of college with massive debt, including high interest credit card debt. This can take many years too pay off if is not at a manageable interest rate. Predatory lenders make every attempt to make high interest loans to college students without their awareness. If your going to college, or your sending your kids to college, be very careful about borrowing money to do so. If you are a parent your best option would be to invest in a 529 plan or ESA account. With a $2000 contribution per year, by the time your child reaches college age you can pay for their college education, giving them a lot less anxiety and a much more secure financial future.


"Approximately 74.9 percent of the U.S. families surveyed in 2004 had credit cards, and 58 percent of those families carried a balance. In 2001, 76.2 percent of families had credit cards, and 55 percent of those families carried a balance." (Source: Federal Reserve Bulletin, February 2006)

The amount of families who carry a debt balance which constantly costs them an increasing amount of money continues to grow. The trend is toward negative cash flow instead of positive cash flow. Don't let yourself get caught in this trend.

"About a quarter of families have no credit cards, and an additional 30 percent or so pay off their balances every month." (Source: Federal Reserve Board survey of consumer finances, 2004)

This is the category you want to fall into. Your better off being in the quarter of families with no credit cards though, because your more likely to save money when you don't have constant access to virtually unlimited spending power. I don't have the figures, but I suspect most of the families who pay their balances every month have a higher than average income.

"The average American with a credit file is responsible for $16,635 in debt, excluding mortgages, according to Experian." (Source: U.S. News and World Report, "The End of Credit Card Consumerism," August 2008)

Not good. The average American is constantly paying credit card companies a portion of their income. Because they have conditioned us to use their products, they have managed to siphon away a portion of the incomes of the lower and middle class. This (along with inflated costs of basic living expenses) the real reason families feel it is now impossible to live without being a dual income family. Elizabeth Warren writes in an essay for Harvard Magazine about the effects of debt on the middle class. She says "Since the early 1980s, the credit industry has rewritten the rules of lending to families. Congress has turned the industry loose to charge whatever it can get and to bury tricks and traps throughout credit agreements. Credit-card contracts that were less than a page long in the early 1980s now number 30 or more pages of small-print legalese. In the details, credit-card companies lend money at one rate, but retain the right to change the interest rate whenever it suits them. They can even raise the rate after the money has been borrowed—a practice once considered too shady even for a back-alley loan shark. When they think they have been cheated, customers can be forced into arbitration in locations thousands of miles from home. Some companies claim that they can repossess anything a customer buys with a credit card."


"28 percent of those surveyed say their ability to pay off their credit card balance has become more difficult." (Source: Javelin Strategy & Research, "Credit Card Issuer Profitability in a Difficult Economy," July 2008)


The credit industry has written the rules to make it nearly impossible for some who have fallen into a financial hole to climb out of it. The same has happened in the mortgage industry. Together these lenders have made middle class life in present times a financial struggle for many. It's time to write our own rules. Rethink the wisdom of acquiring debt. Is it ever a good idea to use a credit card? Is "owning" a home through a "mortgage" really worth it, when you pay 3 to 3 and a half times the value of the home?

"U.S. consumers racked up an estimated $51 billion worth of fast food on their personal credit and debit cards in 2006, compared to $33.2 billion one year earlier." (Source: CardData.com)

We are rapidly making ourselves fatter, and our wallets thinner. Armed with the tools of our own destruction, credit cards, the damage we can do to ourselves is unlimited. We are crushing the American Dream.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) Activates National Examination Team

Source: http://www.ncua.gov/news/press_releases/2009/MA09-0108.htm

In short, this news means that there's going to be increasing credit unions failures. The dominos are falling in our debt based economy.


"January 8, 2008, Alexandria, Va. – Chairman Michael E. Fryzel announced today activation of the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) National Examination Team (NET) to enhance the supervisory process in areas where economic conditions have adversely impacted federally insured credit unions. This initiative is in further response to the difficulties caused by declining home values, high mortgage delinquency rates, high foreclosure rates, high unemployment rates, and concentrations of real estate loans that have affected credit unions to varying degrees. Where those factors are present, NCUA will deploy a specialized team of examiners who will concentrate on the most difficult cases. “As first mentioned last October during our 2009 budget discussions, NCUA is now activating the NET,” said Chairman Fryzel. “The knowledge, skill, and experience of NET members will enable them to quickly identify complex problems, recommend appropriate corrective actions and thereby improve the overall quality of NCUA supervision during a very volatile period for all financial institutions, including credit unions. The NET is a logical and essential component of our overall NCUA's focus on strong and proactive regulation, and the priority we place on safety and soundness."NET will supervise assigned credit unions until problems are resolved, either returning the credit union to regional supervision or activating merger, conservatorship or closure. Additionally, the NET will be responsible for examining and supervising approximately ten credit unions, mainly large and more complex institutions. The NET also represents an opportunity to expose NCUA examiners to a broad range of credit unions and varying levels of risk, thereby augmenting NCUA’s succession planning objectives. The NET is comprised of a director, five problem case officers (PCOs) and the equivalent of one loss risk analysis officer (LRAO). In addition, regional subject matter examiners (SMEs) will be detailed to NET on an as needed basis.The National Credit Union Administration charters and supervises federal credit unions. NCUA, with the backing of the full faith and credit of the U.S. government, also operates and manages the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF), insuring the deposits of nearly 89 million account holders in all federal credit unions and the majority of state-chartered credit unions. NCUA is funded by credit unions, not federal tax dollars. "

Monday, January 5, 2009

Bad Credit Rating Score? It's a blessing in disguise.

"You've got to have good credit!"



As soon as your old enough to get a credit card, it's usually told to the average teenager that building credit is important. That's the conventional wisdom. Unfortunately it's also the reason so many teens and young adults are in debt. They use credit cards with the idea that it's important for them to do so because they "need to build credit". Many people put an enormous amount of stress into their own lives by worrying incessantly about the status of their credit score. They've been taught by society that credit is important.

Make sure you tithe to the credit gods.


You absolutely MUST make sure that you continue to be a good customer of those issuing credit, otherwise how could they make money? Also, unless they come up with an excuse, how can they charge you exorbitant interest rates? They can charge these enormous rates to people getting their first credit card, because they have marketed the idea that credit is extremely important for success in life, so you'd better get a credit card, and use it, otherwise you'll be missing out on the best that life has to offer.

The idea that a 'credit score' is so important has mislead many people into filling the pockets of companies who issue credit. Many people work both for their employer, themselves, and their credit card companies. They pay large monthly premiums on huge debt, in an endless cycle designed to entrap a person for as long as possible so as to extract as much of that persons income as possible.



Breathe. The sky isn't falling...


In reality, your credit rating score is really not as important as you might think. A good credit score isn't going to pay your bills and put food on your table. You can get a debit card instead of a credit card and enjoy all the same convenient. The only good reason you may need a high credit rating score is that some companies may not hire you because of extremely negative marks on your credit score. The companies who look at your credit score and base hiring decisions on it are few and far between however. It's usually only a factor in jobs that involve handling a lot of valuables, such as a jewelry store, a bank, certain federal jobs etc. The way I see it, if you are denied a job because of your credit score, it's probably a blessing in disguise. It's unlikely you would have a good experience working at a company that judges people based on their credit score.


A good credit score may actually be the undoing of many people. It empowers you mostly to do things which are self destructive. It gives you the power to buy lots of things you don't have. It gives you a false sense of security which leads to undisciplined financial management. It makes you think you are a master of personal finance simply because you have a "good score", meanwhile your hundreds of thousands in debt and your monthly expenses seem to always find a way of meeting or exceeding your income. In this way they are able to mold people into modern day debt slaves. The sad part is that some people actually feel they are getting ahead by engaging in this sort of volunteer slavery.



The silver lining


It may truly be a blessing in disguise to have a time period in your life when your credit score sinks so low that you are unable to open up lines of credit and make life altering financial decisions such as purchasing a home. Many people are in very dire straits financially simply because they really thought that there was no way banks would lend out money to them unless it wasn't risky. What they failed to realize is that as the one purchasing the home you really take all the risk. Credit card companies and banks are only too happy to lend out money to anyone they can. They stand to gain much more though by making the world of higher and higher debt an exclusive club of those who build their "Credit score". They've managed to actually make the ability to acquire greater sums of debt seem desirable. "It's amazing! I qualified for a million dollar line of credit! Isn't that great? Now I can go a million dollars into debt if I want to!" Read that sentence out loud. Does it seem at all ridiculous to you?



Seriously, breathe, relax your shoulders, it will be OK


So the moral of the story is - Do not have a heart attack if you happen to have a low credit score. It may have been just the wake up call and lesson you need to work toward true financial freedom. The tools you could use to harm yourself have been taken away. Now you can use real tools (your mind, self discipline, and determination) to build a bridge to debt freedom. When you manage to pay off your debts you may find that you've learned a valuable lesson of living within your means. You'll likely find that the time you spent simplifying your life in order to save money is the very thing which will your secure your prosperous future.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Americans have too much debt

“Ninety-seven point five percent of Americans reach age 65, a normal retirement age, and they don’t have the resources to retire.” - Citizenlink.org

According to the Center for American Progress, family debt has hit record highs. Household debt averaged a record 133.7% of disposable income in the fourth quarter of 2007. In the fourth quarter of 2007, families spent 14.3% of their disposable income to service their debt, up from 13.0% in the first quarter of 2001.

Debt is an important part of personal finance descision making. Just because it is normal to have debt does not mean it should be. Focusing your energies on paying creditors and bill collectors and getting out of debt is extremely important to your future financial health.
 
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