Archive for the ‘Spending’ Category

Lost home, lost job, now what?

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Many Americans these days find themselves in a common situation: the house has been lost, jobs have been lost, and credit card debt is out-of-control. What comes next?

It’s not possible for a blog article to completely answer this question, partly since any number of things can happen. But what follows is a great set of tasks to financially “pick up the pieces” after taking a moment to sit down, breathe, and get ready to move forward with confidence that better days are ahead.

People living through a stressful financial situation often feel overwhelmed by the experience because tight money impacts one’s ability to do a wide variety of things. Likewise, thinking clearly can feel especially difficult. There’s no magic solution, but one possible remedy for this is not confusing, esoteric, or abstract: brainstorm options, collect as much financial information on yourself as possible, think about the information in a systematic way, and choose from amongst the options that best fits your short and long-term financial needs.

Checklists are one the greatest, intuitive, and simplest forms of getting organized immediately. I use them frequently. Consider any of the following actions, and fit them into a handwritten checklist of things to get done. Aggressively check them off one by one as you move through the list.

  • Gather all of your personal financial documents into one location/folder
  • Use receipts from last month to roughly estimate your expenditures on a monthly basis: tick the discretionary and non-discretionary items separately on the sub-list. Set up a basic budget, without fretting over precise accuracy.
  • Find cost-effective housing. Even those with families can rent several rooms in a house for cheaper than renting a new home.
  • Be honest with the children about financial concerns and the need for lifestyle adjustments.
  • Create a list of monthly costs you can do without. Cut them from your budget for an entire month and see what happens, knowing that if you cannot bear the experience for that month, they can always be added back later on. Especially try and cut the items that represent recurring monthly charges.
  • Cut up the credit card plastic and switch to paying for as much as possible with cash. For items that require an account number, use a debit card if cash will not work.
  • Call credit card lenders and start discussing options for your outstanding debt. Make clear to them with real numbers from your financial situation your limited ability to repay at least some of the debt and a desire to have interest rates frozen while repaying the balance.
  • Refresh your resume, keep your cell phone handy, and practice mock interviews with your spouse or friend. Draft a couple of different cover letter templates for different types of positions. Borrow a friend’s or family member’s computer if you don’t already have one to begin searches for jobs on job aggregator websites — one of the most efficient methods possible. Getting income up and running again has to be a top priority.
  • Use your network of friends and family to get into contact with people at organizations that you’re willing and interested in working at. If granted contact with a target of interest, don’t lose hope if they cannot offer you a job; rather, ask them for references to further people in that sector.
  • Fill out the paperwork to acquire unemployment income. Having paid into the system while working, you’re in all likelihood entitled to a modest amount of assitance from it now.
  • Set up an emergency fund with six months of expenses covered.
  • Grocery shop for every meal.

There are many more options than these listed. Share some of your favorites.

Raj Patel writes for DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs.  DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.

Credit Card Industry Providing Credit Help Websites?

Friday, April 17th, 2009

In the article entitled “Help with Credit Card Debt,” Gerri Willis, CNN’s personal finance editor, brings to our attention a new public relations move by a credit card industry trying to preempt a new regulatory system that will negatively impact their ability to make money. Quite simply, credit card companies banded together and put up a new website for consumer help. One of the goals of this site – HelpWithMyCredit.org – is to provide consumers with easier access to credit counselors. But the site doesn’t mention that using a credit counseling service from their list can drive down your credit score.

Aside from the credit counseling issue, should someone with debt take the rest of the website seriously? Probably not. For one, those building the website may offer helpful tips, but perverse incentives underlie whatever they present over the Internet: their long-term objective as a business remains to extract the maximum profits from consumers through their product – credit cards.

Take for example the page on credit card basics with the headline “Why You May Need Credit.” While some of the pointers they list are truthful, the page stills paints credit cards as a necessary part of life. But for those that struggle under the weight of revolving and overwhelming debt, many of the items in the list described as benefits are in reality not worth the cost by a long shot. They write, “Spreading out payments on high-dollar items” as one of the needs. However, if you can’t afford a high-dollar item and it is not critical to survival, then don’t spring for it.

Yet another of their “needs” is “Making urgent repairs to your car or home.” While few will argue with the need to keep a roof one’s head, perhaps the repair costs on a house that is already too expensive to maintain, with unrealistic mortgage payments and certain foreclosure is not worth adding money into. It can be the best course of action from a financial standpoint, depending on the specifics to the situation, to not repair a home and instead transitition into a rental unit. For a car, the need for reliable transportation to and from work is essential to financial security. But repairing a nonfunctional window or a scratch on the paint job are not needs; keeping the engine and tires in shape are. Even if faced with cases in which one needs to shell out for a house or car, build and rely on an emergency fund instead of the credit card.

The site goes on to identify Internet purchases as a need. The merits to buying over the Internet are numerous and include likely better price points for products because of economies of scale, the vendor’s efficient access to the target market, and the seller’s costs of doing business online. But this doesn’t mean you need a credit card to get the goods. Consider using a debit card, check card, or storing cash on a PayPal account for transfer to the seller at the point of purchase.

What accurately captures the perspective of someone thinking clearly about HelpWithMyCredit.org is one of their final bullet points – “Carry only the cards you expect to use, and keep the others in a safe place.” Why should someone not just get rid of the other cards, to say nothing of the ones you use? The truth is many people face the real temptation to go and retrieve the cards from their “safe place” – safe for reckless spending – and get into even deeper debt. Here’s a better idea for someone that is unmistakably going to fall back into the plastic routine: to maintain a credit history, keep one card open with the largest credit line, then immediately cut it up, freeze it, or toss it into a bonfire along with all of the other cards you have. Get rid of them once and for all, with one credit account left open.

Raj Patel writes for DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs.  DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.

Cutting the Digital Services Bill

Friday, April 10th, 2009

At DebtGoal we’ve stuck to our story — recurring expenses in one’s budget are some of the most attractive to cut when trying to free up cash for debt reduction payments. The usual suspects: housing, gym memberships, and magazine and newspaper subscriptions are all worthy candidates for the chopping block. But another high-yield area – digital services – may contain the savings potential to solve a budgetary crisis.

Here’s a list of some of tips for trimming these bills each month:

  • Some personal finance columns suggest getting rid of a dedicated fax line in the home. Go further. get rid of all landlines and focus on a single, no-frills cell phone for most telephony needs. If you need to make expensive phone calls off of your plan, use an Internet-based service that makes “computer to computer” calls at little or no cost.
  • Get rid of your cable TV service. This sounds drastic, but many of the most highly rated TV programs are now available for free on the Internet.
  • Unplug your digital media appliances (TV, DVD player, stereo, etc.) when not using them. This will save a little on your energy bill since small amounts of electricity are consumed when equipment is placed on stand by. The “off” position for a lot of modern plug-ins is not truly off.
  • Use the credit card interest rate reduction strategy. Call your providers and ask for rates to be lowered. Ask to have rates reduced back to a promotional level (provided they make sense in the long run — i.e., they do not jump to sky-high levels after a few months of discounts). Research cheaper service alternatives and mention those as clear alternatives to your current situation. Of course, switch providers if it makes financial sense.
  • Bundled packages. Choose a package from the same provider including the cell phone, cable TV, and Internet access.
  • Inquire about discounts for any of the organizations you belong to: a Church, AAA, alumni associations, professional and service groups, and even through the company you work for. Ask over the phone about the organizations they do provide discounts for: you may be an inactive member that still qualifies for the rate cut. Maybe you can even band together with coworkers, friends, housemates, or family to land a group deal.
  • Most importantly, understand your digital services to be discretionary costs. In the tightest of financial crunches, these are still items that could be cut. From personal experience, I’ve gone without cable TV before, and it turned out to be a blessing in disguise: you naturally look for other entertainment, and I ended up getting outdoors more often, spending even more quality time with friends and family, reading, exercising, and generally leading a healthier lifestyle.
Raj Patel writes for DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs.  DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.

Blog Carnivals in Review

Friday, April 10th, 2009

Recent blog carnivals have covered a wide breadth of topics on debt and other personal finance topics. Some of the more interesting this week include:

Money Hacks Carnival

Solid Planning Tips and Tricks Carnival

Carnival of Twenty-Something Finances

Festival of Frugality

Carnival of Personal Development

Carnival of Wealth, Money, and Life

Raj Patel writes for DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs.  DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.

Frugal Family Secrets

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

Jason Paul at USA Today writes about how frugal families have enlisted the help of financial planners in step with the Frugal Family Challenge. While these stories are uplifting and should give anyone with debt hope to restrategize their budget and get back on track towards debt elimination, the tricks of the trade these families have all employed are all excellent options for saving each month. Some of the highlights from the article include:

  • Reducing the satellite TV package. For an even more impressive switch, it sounds radical, but get rid of cable TV completely! Instead watch films you already own. Watch your favorite programs on the Internet.
  • Eat all meals in. This sounds crazy at first, but with a family, this is an excellent way to keep everyone on the same page, increase the amount of quality family time, and enjoy corollary activities together like grocery shopping and cooking.
  • Use a flexible spending account for medical costs through employers. With pre-tax income contributions, a family can save nontrivial amounts over the course of a year. Budgeting the right amount is critical, however, because depending on the rules to the account, you can forfeit unused contributions. Check with your human resources manager for the specifics.
  • Skip trips to the high-end supermarket.
  • Check the tire pressure. Furthermore, learn how to check the oil on the car as well. These are quick actions that can help avoid expensive breakdowns and repairs.
Common sense actions coupled with frugality can help to make a difference on one’s monthly costs over a long period of time. Consider these strategies, making sure at the outset to be organized, have a budget in place, and understand your current debt level.
 
Raj Patel writes for DebtGoal.com, a do-it-yourself system for getting out of debt and lowering your interest costs.  DebtGoal.com incorporates all of the techniques discussed in this post and can help users understand and get visibility to and manage their debt finances.