Friday, December 19, 2008

Eliminate Credit Card Debt Now and Forever


The use of credit card is increasing day by day. The credit card debt has already reached hundred of billions of USD, the amount which can sink the economics of many small countries.

If it looks like you are submerging in credit card debt and you will never get out of it, don't panic! This article will help you great to eliminate credit card debt, even if you don't think you have any extra money.

Here are some simple tips designed for you to eliminate credit card debt.

Develop a family budget: First of all you should list all sources of your income. Then calculate your fixed expenses such as insurance premiums, home loan payments and car loans. Now, make the list of expenses, which vary from month to month such as electricity bills, telephone bills, clothing and recreation expenses. Sticking to family budget will surely eliminate credit card debt. If you find any hope of controlling your credit card debt you must create.

Consolidate your debt: You are the perfect candidate for credit card debt consolidation if you have more than one credit card with debt. Banks charge a monthly fee for all facilities you are using such as writing a check on your card, using an ATM, using companies like breathing, MBNA and $25 per month as minimum monthly. You can get a debt consolidation loan at far lower interest rate. Just go to your bank and ask for a debt consolidation loan to eliminate credit card debt.

Take a home equity loan: To eliminate credit card debt you can take home equity loan at a considerably lower interest rate, if you have equity in your home.

The last and final thing you can do to eliminate credit card debt is just transfer your balance to a zero interest rate card for a specific time.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Election 2008: Obama on the Economic Issues





Obama on Taxes

-- Income Taxes: Senator Barack Obama would hold most income tax rates steady, making permanent the Bush tax cuts for the vast majority of individual taxpayers. With those cuts scheduled to expire in 2011, he would allow rates for households making more than $250,000 (or individuals making more than roughly $200,000) to return to earlier levels. Earners who now pay today's maximum 35% rate would see their top marginal rate go back to the 36.9% in effect in the Clinton years, for example.

-- Estate Taxes: Obama proposes setting inheritance taxes permanently at 45% on estates over $3.5 million.

-- Capital-Gains Taxes: Obama would again limit any increases in capital-gains rates, as well as taxes on dividends, to households making more than $250,000 or individuals bringing in more than $200,000. For those folks, he proposes increasing the maximum rate to somewhere between 20% and 25%.

-- New Tax Cuts: Obama has proposed a handful of new tax credits and other adjustments aimed at helping struggling families, students, and others. He would institute a refundable tax credit of 6.2% of earnings, up to a maximum of $8,100, for example, along with a refundable mortgage credit equal to 10% of loan payments for homeowners who don't itemize their deductions. Students would be eligible for a $4,000 annual credit to help defray college costs, while Obama would eliminate income taxes for seniors making less than $50,000.

-- Economic Stimulus: Obama has proposed giving businesses a $3,000 tax credit this year and next for every net new job they create to help jump-start the stalled economy. He would also temporarily eliminate taxes on unemployment benefits and calls for legislation that would allow struggling individuals to take up to $10,000 from their IRA or 401(k) retirement accounts this year and next without paying the normal tax penalty for early withdrawals.

-- Business Taxes: Obama has proposed eliminating all capital-gains taxes on investments in small business. He would also make permanent the R&D tax credit and credits for renewable energy production. But elsewhere, he would eke more revenue out of the corporate sector: He would like eliminate loopholes that he says favor oil and gas companies, for one. And he favors shifting the tax code to favor companies that create jobs in the U.S. and increase taxes on those that move jobs overseas.

Obama on Jobs

-- Job Creation: Obama wants to steer $50 billion into an economic stimulus. He proposes that $25 billion go into a "Jobs and Growth Fund" to prevent cuts in road and bridge maintenance, and to fund school repair. He says this effort will save more than 1 million jobs.

-- 'Green' Jobs: Obama wants to create 5 million new "green jobs" and invest $150 billion over 10 years in biofuels and fuel infrastructure, plug-in hybrids, commercial-scale renewable energy, low-emissions coal plants, and a new digital electricity grid. He also wants to expand federal transportation investments to the tune of $60 billion over 10 years, which he says will create 2 million jobs.

-- Unemployment: Obama is calling for a temporary expansion of the unemployment insurance program for those who have exhausted their current benefits. He'd also extend unemployment insurance to a bigger pool of workers, including some part-time workers.

-- Trade: Obama says he opposes new deals that lack labor and environmental safeguards. Obama wants to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico so it has more favorable terms for U.S. workers. He wants to expand the Trade Adjustment Assistance program, which trains workers who lose their jobs because of offshoring.

-- Labor Rights: Obama wants to strengthen the ability of workers to organize unions through what's known as the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA). The bill allows workers to join a union if a simple majority sign authorization cards instead of holding an election. He has won the support of the two major U.S. labor federations, the AFL-CIO and Change to Win, whose leaders say EFCA is their top legislative priority.

-- Immigration: Obama supports strengthening border security with more personnel, technology, and infrastructure. He also wants to create tougher penalties against employers who hire undocumented immigrants. At the same time, he wants to increase the number of legal immigrants in order to keep families together and meet the demand for jobs that employers say they can't fill. Undocumented workers who clear background checks will have a path to citizenship.

-- Work/Family Balance: Obama wants to double funding for after-school programs, provide low-income families with a refundable tax credit to help with child-care expenses, and encourage flexible work schedules. Obama wants to extend the Family Medical Leave Act -- which allows workers three months of unpaid leave -- to cover eldercare and cases of domestic violence.

-- Minimum Wage: Obama wants to raise the minimum wage to $9.50 an hour by 2011 (up from 2009's rate of $7.25 an hour) and index it to inflation. He says these measures will help ensure that full-time workers earn a "living wage."

Obama on Education

-- Early Childhood Education: Obama proposes a $10 billion "Zero to Five" early childhood education plan that would expand access to Early Head Start, preschool, and child-care services. Would establish an early learning council to coordinate federal and state early childhood education programs.

-- K-12 Education: Obama supports goals of No Child Left Behind but says law has significant flaws, including lack of adequate funding. Says he will improve assessments and accountability for NCLB. Proposes funding of intervention strategies to reduce dropouts.

-- Teacher Pay and Training: Obama supports bonus pay for teachers and additional support and training for teachers and principals. Wants to make it easier to remove bad teachers from classrooms. Proposes that all teaching programs be accredited.

-- Math and Science: Obama says math and science must be a national priority. Will step up recruiting of math and science teachers. Wants to enhance science instruction and enhance science assessments.

-- School Choice: Obama wants to increase federal funding for charter schools from $200 million a year to $400 million, but wants to make it easier to close low-performing charter schools. Opposes school vouchers for private and parochial schools.

-- School Funding: Obama's early childhood and K-12 plans call for additional spending of $18 billion a year. Obama says cost of plan would be offset by spending cuts and reforming federal contracting procedures.

-- Classroom Technology: Obama proposes a $500 million matching fund for technology in the classroom. Program will include more classroom technology and student performance data tracking. Will create a new technology-based curriculum.

-- Higher Education: Obama wants to change the student loan program by eliminating the subsidies to private lenders and mandating that all federal student loans be provided through the federal direct loan program. Proposes a $4,000 refundable tax credit for college tuition; recipients of the credit will be required to perform 100 hours of community service.

Obama on Health Care

-- His Approach: Obama would achieve universal coverage through an expansion of employer-based and government insurance programs, and create programs and incentives that will rein in health-care inflation.

-- Coverage: Obama thinks all employers should be required to offer insurance or pay into a public fund, with subsidies available to small businesses. All children would be covered, Medicaid would be expanded, and a National Health Insurance Exchange created to offer policies to individuals not covered through their employers.

-- Insurance Changes: Obama would prohibit the denial of coverage due to a preexisting condition.

-- Malpractice Reform: Obama wants to reform malpractice while preserving patient rights by coming up with new forums for addressing physician errors.

-- Drug Prices: Obama wants to allow re-importation of drugs and faster introduction of generics, and would repeal the ban against Medicare negotiating prices directly with drug companies.

-- Technology: Obama wants to commit $50 billion to the adoption of electronic medical records and wider deployment of information technology.

-- Quality of Care: Obama wants to support a national institute to monitor quality and set standards, and reward health-care providers for high-quality care.

Obama on the Financial Crisis

-- Homeowners: Obama has proposed requiring financial institutions participating in the Treasury Dept.'s assistance programs to halt foreclosures for 90 days for homeowners living in their homes and making "good faith" efforts to pay. He has also backed efforts, including a law passed this summer, to encourage mortgage lenders and servicers to modify more loans voluntarily but requiring them to give up some of the loans' value. As with McCain's plan, and nascent Treasury loan-modification efforts, it is unclear how many such homeowner-relief programs would apply to mortgages that had been divvied up into tranches and sold to investors. Before the crisis worsened this fall, Obama proposed more scrutiny of the subprime mortgage industry, standardized disclosure of mortgage terms, and allowing judges to modify mortgage terms in bankruptcy, much as they can modify the terms of other loans.

-- Unemployment: Obama also proposes temporarily eliminating taxes on unemployment benefits, and proposes to extend unemployment benefits.

-- Jobs: Obama is calling for a temporary $3,000 tax credit for each net new full-time job companies create in the U.S. over the next two years. He also proposes a national, $50 billion program to improve roads and other infrastructure, and supports spending $150 billion on green-energy initiatives, both of which his campaign touts as fostering job growth.

-- Other: Obama proposes short-term federal loans for cash-strapped state and municipal governments, which are facing dramatically lower tax receipts and gaping budget deficits amid the housing downturn and weakening economy.

Obama on Retirement

-- Temporary Assistance: Obama proposes allowing working Americans to make withdrawals of up to 15% from IRAs and 401(k)s during 2008 and 2009, to a maximum of $10,000, without triggering the standard early-withdrawal penalty of 10%; the withdrawals would still be subject to income taxes. Like McCain, Obama supports temporarily suspending mandatory minimum withdrawal rules for retirees over 70, but he also proposes to temporarily waive taxes on withdrawals for those who do withdraw up to those minimums.

-- Retirement Plans: Obama proposes matching 50% on the dollar for the first $1,000 of retirement-plan contributions for families earning less than $75,000 a year, to encourage savings. He also has proposed requiring employers that don't sponsor employee retirement plans to set up automatic contributions to IRAs for employees, with provisions allowing workers to opt out.

-- Taxes: Obama proposes eliminating income taxes for seniors making less than $50,000, which the campaign estimates will save 7 million seniors an average of $1,400.

-- Social Security: Obama supports increasing payroll taxes on annual income over $250,000, perhaps by 2% to 4%, to improve Social Security's financial position; currently, only income under $250,000 is subject to the 12.4% withholding tax, which is split between employers and employees. He opposes increasing the age at which Social Security benefits may be collected, which is another commonly cited fix for the program, and also opposes privatizing benefits.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Managing Your Credit Cards

ARE YOUR credit cards the worst investments you have going these days?

According to a SmartMoney.com poll, about 50% of readers are using cards that charge more than 12% interest on outstanding balances. And 17.5% are paying 18% or more. With an interest rate like that, you'd better be paying off that balance in full each month. If not, read on: Our new, interactive credit card analyzer will help you find a new card that won't bleed you dry.

It's no surprise that so many people carry such expensive credit cards. After all, there is a whole industry of card issuers out there devoted to using hidden fees and interest rate gymnastics to gouge you as best they can. Consider this: According to Gerri Detweiler, author of "The Ultimate Credit Handbook," some credit card companies are actually starting to get rid of card holders who pay off their balances each month. "Instead, the card issuer might try to move you to a card with an annual fee or a debit card," she says.

The key to getting a better credit card deal is figuring out how much a given card really costs you. You've probably gotten a stack of card offers in the mail over the past week, each sounding cheaper than the next. Just plug in a few numbers, and our analyzer will calculate the true cost -- or net interest rate -- of each one, so you can compare them side by side. And if you're looking for a specific type of card -- one that, say, gives you airline mileage or no annual fee -- check out our credit card rate center and pick out those that best fit your needs.

Rates
Whatever you do, don't kid yourself when it comes to those tempting introductory offers. Sure, you may think you're going to pay off that balance in full by the time that low rate bumps up to a frightening 18% APR or higher. But those institutions are banking on the fact that you won't. And get real -- they're probably right.

You also want to make sure that the interest rate touted on the card offer doesn't only apply to the juicy balance you're going to roll over. Some card issuers actually charge you two interest rates -- one for your transfer balance, and one for new purchases, says Detweiler.

Rates can also increase sharply if you're late on a payment. "I've seen rates jump from 12% to 19.8% when an account is as little as one day late," says Detweiler. That's often a permanent rate change, so if you fall into that trap, you're probably going to have to change cards altogether. (But you should first give your card issuer a call to see if you can return to the lower rate.)

Grace Period
If you do pay off your balance in full each month, make sure you get a card with a grace period (the amount of time you have to pay your bill before you start accruing interest) of 25 days or longer. Believe it or not, some cards start charging you interest at the time of purchase, so even if you pay off your balance each month, you're still going to owe your card issuer some extra cash.

Other cards have sneaky grace periods that only cover you for 20 days from the transaction. With these cards, if you wait to pay your bill until it's actually due, you'll still owe interest.

Don't be fooled by the grace period, however. If you carry a balance, you pay interest on that baby 365 days out of the year (or at least until you pay it off).

Fees
With more consumers getting smart about paying off their monthly balance, card issuers have gotten slyer with their fees -- from transfer fees to over-the-limit fees. That's why you need to actually read the fee disclosure, which should be listed in a box on the credit card offer. Here are some things to look out for:

Fixed vs. Variable
You may be offered a choice between a fixed and variable rate, with the fixed rate being slightly higher. But unlike your mortgage, it really doesn't matter much. Why? Because a fixed rate really isn't fixed at all. All "fixed" means is that when your interest rate changes, your card issuer needs to warn you 15 days in advance.

In contrast, a variable rate can change without notice. Most variable rates, however, are tied to a national interest rate like the prime rate, so you shouldn't be caught completely off guard. The bottom line is that you should make sure you understand how the rate is calculated and keep an eye on your bills. But you should be doing that anyway.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

How to dig yourself out of credit card debt

I tell many of my small-business clients, whether sole proprietors or corporations, to get a couple of credit cards in place.

I like using credit cards for several reasons:

• Most of the top-of-the-line cards will send year-end summaries of your spending, which is good for those clients who do not keep up to date financial statements.

• Credit cards are good for travel and other expenses and pay only one bill every month.

• It is good to have credit card debt available for those times when cash is hard to find.

The major drawback to using credit cards is that too many people overextend and find themselves in the black hole of high interest credit card debt. Current credit card debt totals about $360 billion. As consumers, we are more in debt than the government; not a flattering comparison. Credit card debt is easy to get into and sometimes very difficult to dig yourself out of.

Here are some suggestions to help you stay out of the black hole:

• Do everything you can to pay off the credit card balance every month. Most credit cards have interest rates between 13.5 percent and 21 percent. Paying that kind of interest, except in extreme cases, is just not smart.

• If you can't pay off the entire balance, at least make a payment that is in excess of the minimum due. The minimum payment amount is simply the interest amount due on the principal. If you only pay the minimum you will never pay off the card. Depending on the balance outstanding, add $50 to several hundred dollars to the minimum in order to eat away at the principal balance. While you're doing this, try and stay away from using the card.

• If you find yourself knee deep in credit card debt, find some solutions that will help with the burden. Call your credit card company and ask them for a lower interest rate. Believe it or not, this actually works sometimes. They would rather see you pay off the debt than see you in their bad debt write-offs.

• Find one of those credit cards with an introductory rate of between 5.9 percent and 6.9 percent and transfer your balance to get a better interest rate that will make it easier to get the principal paid down. While the interest rate is low, get the balance paid off.

• If that does not work, find a way to consolidate your debts into a regular-term note. These will have a lower interest rate and you will only make one payment every month. When you find yourself in this situation, lay off the credit cards until you have your consolidation loan paid off. Learn from your mistake, don't compound it by incurring even more debt.

• Take out a home-equity loan and, if necessary, lend it to your company to pay off debts. The interest is deductible for you personally, lower than the credit card interest rate and the company can set up a payment schedule to pay you back.

If your plan is to pay off the balance every month, use a trick my father taught me. Enter each credit card purchase into your checkbook as if you had written a check. When the bill comes in, you have already accounted for the payment required in your checkbook and can then write the check without wondering where the cash will come from.

If you have savings that you do not want to dip into to pay off the credit cards, look at what you are earning on your savings and what you are paying on the debt. One is always higher than the other and it is not your savings interest rate. Use your savings to get out of debt and know that you can always charge an emergency on your credit card. Take the interest charges you are not incurring every month and save that instead.

If while you are working yourself out of debt, you feel like you are having to do without, do two things. Remember that you got yourself into debt because you spent more than you had to spend. To get yourself out of debt, you will need to reverse that scenario. Look at your credit card statements over that past few years and add up the finance and interest charges incurred. You will be stunned at what you could have purchased if you had not paid it to the credit card companies as interest.

The truth about credit card debt

Conventional wisdom is that were all hooked and struggling. The reality is, in fact, quite different and less frightening.

Youve probably heard that the average American carries more than $8,000 in credit card debt.

Its a figure frequently cited by politicians, journalists and pundits as a sure sign of impending economic collapse. They argue that consumers, already struggling under this massive burden of debt, soon will have to stop spending like drunken sailors. The economic recovery, therefore, is doomed!

The surprising thing about this statistic isnt that its so widely known. Rather, its that the statistic paints a picture thats just plain wrong.
  • In reality, most Americans owe nothing to credit card companies.
  • Most households that carry balances owe $2,000 or less.
  • Only about 1 in 20 American households owes $8,000 or more on credit cards.
These figures are from the Federal Reserves 2001 Survey of Consumer Finances, one of the most comprehensive assessments of what Americans own and owe. (The survey is updated every three years; a summary of 2004's results will be published in early 2006.)

Take heart: Were actually frugal
In much the same way, a relatively small population with huge credit card balances can skew the average to make it look like the typical American is carrying a much bigger debt load than he or she actually is. Consider:
  • 23.8% of American households have no credit cards at all -- no bank cards, no retail cards, nothing.
  • Another 31.2% of the households the Fed surveyed paid off their most recent credit card bills in full.
  • So together, the households that owed nothing on credit cards equaled 55% of the total.
Heres some better news: Paying off balances actually became more common between 1998 and 2001. The proportion of households that had bank cards (Visa, MasterCard, etc.) who reported that they regularly paid off their balances in full rose 1.5 percentage points to 55.3%.

We dont carry that much debt
Of the households that did carry a balance, the median amount owed was $1,900. That means half of the households with a balance owed more, and half owed less. (Medians are less subject to the skewing phenomenon that plagues averages; thats why economists tend to favor them.)

Bill Whitt at the VIP Forum, a Washington D.C. research firm, helped me dig even deeper. By analyzing the credit card debts of all the households the Fed surveyed, Whitt discovered:
  • Only 29% of households owe $1,000 or more on their cards.
  • 21% owe $2,000 or more.
  • 6% owe $8,000 or more.
  • 4% owe $10,500 or more.
  • 1% owe $21,400 or more.
The Fed statistics pretty much gibe with what Fair Isaac, the creator of the FICO credit score, discovered when it reviewed millions of credit reports.

There are a few differences between the universe the Fed examined and the one looked at by Fair Isaac. For one thing, credit reports are individual -- theres no such thing as a household or even a joint credit report. Also, you have to have and use credit to have a credit report. Finally, credit reports dont typically distinguish between balances you pay off and those you carry each month.

But again, Fair Isaacs statistics show a world in which most people are light to moderate users of credit:
  • About 48% of credit card holders owed less than $1,000
  • About 10% of card holders had total card balances in excess of $10,000.
  • More than half of all people with credit cards use less than 30% of their total credit card limit.
  • Just over 1 in 8 people use 80% or more of their credit card limit.
Theres still plenty of trouble out there
Does this mean all the hand-wringing over consumer debt is so much noise? Hardly. Although most Americans seem to be avoiding the credit card trap, there are still plenty of people on the financial edge:
  • More than a third -- 36% -- of those who owe more than $10,000 on their cards have household incomes under $50,000, according to the VIP Forum analysis.
  • 13% who owe that much have household incomes under $30,000.
  • The percentage of disposable income used to pay debts is still near record highs.
  • The median value of total outstanding debt owed by households rose 9.6% between 1998 and 2001.
  • Bankruptcies set another record in 2003, with 1.6 million personal filings, the American Bankruptcy Institute reports.
All of that is more than enough evidence to suggest that a large number of people are overdosing on debt. The average American, though, seems to be doing just fine.