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Treat Bankruptcy Symptoms Early

How do you know when you are at risk for bankruptcy?

Your failing financial health will exhibit symptoms similar to those homeowners experience when they contract the fear of foreclosure — tightening in the household budget, shortness of cash, and a general feeling of financial malaise.

For non-homeowners the only pain missing is a mortgage interest rate adjustment which can be a real pain in the assets.

Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA), with its new counseling requirements and stiff rules helped reduce bankruptcies by 70 percent from a record high level in 2005.

Some of the decrease was due to the end of unusually high number of bankruptcies filed to beat the deadline on the newer, tougher rules, but some of the decrease also came from the counseling requirements.

Under the new law bankruptcy hopefuls must go through counseling before and after filing. Studies repeatedly reveal smarter consumers are better, more financially stable consumers than those less endowed with financial finesse.

Unfortunately, the law was passed just as the housing market — and the benefits of counseling — was thrown for a loop by an inordinate number of subprime and other nontraditional mortgages poorly underwritten for those who really couldn’t afford the terms.

Homeowners, homeowners cum renters facing rising rents and others who, for whatever reason, just can’t financially hack it, are beginning to bang at the double doors of bankruptcy court again, according to the Association of Independent Consumer Credit Counseling Agencies (AICCCA), a national organization of nonprofit agencies that advocate for debtors, counsel consumers and provide debt management services to consumers with excessive unsecured debt.

The American Bankruptcy Institute reported in May that bankruptcy filings increased 51.3 from May in 2006.

AICCCA says of 400,000 consumers it counseled since the new law went into effect in October of 2005, more than 95 percent of them went on to file for bankruptcy.

That’s often because by the time consumers make it into counseling, their potential for bankruptcy already critical.

‘If consumers recognized earlier the warning signs of serious financial problems, they would have more choices for a successful solution,’ said David Jones, president, AICCCA.

To help, AICCCA has developed warning signs that cash flow has become anorexic. Two or more require immediate remedial action. Unless the warning signs are treated, bankruptcy may be the only cure.

The AICCCA says if you experience two or more of those early warning pangs of bankruptcy pains you can’t take two payday loans and call someone in the morrow.

You need professional help with your financial matters and you need it now.

AICCCA offers such counseling referrals. Others are available from a host of agencies including National Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC); NeighborWorks of America; Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN); U.S. Department Of Housing and Urban Development; and local community and social service programs.

Written by Broderick Perkins www.RealtyTimescom. Copyright

This post was last modified on 02/03/2015 11:25 am