Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional

Valid CSS!
   

Informative Articles

Free Debt Management Programs
This article provides useful, detailed information about Free Debt Management Programs. Free debt management programs are designed to overcome the burden of debt accumulated from personal loans, medical bills, credit...

Get Out From Under Debt Weight and Soar to Financial Security
Meg's finances were okay, but she wanted more than to just barely meet expenses. So she decided to start an Internet business. She searched around, found a reliable company that she liked, products that she felt comfortable using and...

How To Pay Credit Card Debt Off
If you are determined to pay credit card debt off you are making the best financial decision of your life. The reason credit card debt is so bad is because it carries such a high interest rate. The quickest way to take back control of your...

Tips for Credit Card Debt Management
Debt management is a course every American needs to take simply because so many Americans are clueless when it comes to credit and debt management. This is unfortunate because many people do permanent damage to their credit record by not knowing how...

What is gambling debt counseling?
Gambling is addictive and could lead to severe debt. Nearly 75% of the American population gambles occasionally. Gambling could lead to mental stress and could leave you without a dime. There are thousands of people who gamble and are caught in a...

 
Debt and financial optimism in the UK continue.

With £1.3 trillion pounds worth of debt in the UK, Scotland's Citizens Advice Bureau ( http://www.cas.org.uk/ ) has welcomed a new Bill to regulate lenders and protect borrowers from creating un-repayable levels of personal debt.

Chief executive Kaliani Lyle said: "For years, Citizens Advice Bureaux have been dealing with case after case of ordinary people who have been enticed into unsustainable debt.”

"The existing legislation - the 1974 Consumer Credit Act - is simply too antiquated to deal with the explosion in aggressively marketed credit that has taken place over the past decade or so.”

The Consumer Credit Act is set up to outlaw “extortionate” interest rates, however it has proved to be ineffective as it doesn't actually define what is regarded as extortionate.

This coincides with an investigation being carried out by banking watchdogs, into suspected mis-selling of personal loans and credit cards at bank branch levels. Following on from the BBC's Real Story programme which revealed banks are offering large staff bonuses to encourage sales of expensive loans, credit cards and other financial products. Staff at Lloyds TSB were shown to have encouraged customers to accept sums of money they could not afford to repay.
Which? ( http://www.which.net/ ) said it believed it was time the industry had a proper debate over sales incentive structures.
The BBC also criticised the expensive cost of the bank's payment protection insurance and how credit cards were pushed onto customers.
Graeme Millar, of the Scottish Consumer Council, said: “Consumers themselves need to act responsibly and ensure they are not asking for money they cannot afford to repay."
Tougher codes of practice imposing stricter standards on the way products are sold, and the use of financial information qualified financial advisers and from comparison web sites like Moneynet ( http://www.moneynet.co.uk ) can help to gain consumers the best deals, and reduce the risks of mis-selling.

Independent financial adviser, Alan Steele commented, “Debt has always been a problem for a minority of people. One of the current problems is the willingness of bank managers to hand out loans and credit cards, which means this minority has increased, but the majority are coping with their debt.”

It remains to be seen whether the nation's optimistic mood, recently reflected in a Mori survey carried out for the Prudential, in its ability to cope with levels of personal debt is long or short term. The report showed consumers are still failing to save, with one in five people saying they had no plans to increase the amount they put away.

Jackie Ronson, of the Prudential ( http://www.prudential.com/ ), said that many people are viewing their disposable income as decreasing, and yet they are happy to maintain their current level of debt, "add to that the continued concern about pensions in the UK, and we are looking at people who are likely to seriously struggle in retirement."

Additional Resources
Scotsman ( http://business.scotsman.com/ )
BBC ( http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/ )

About the Author
Richard lives in Edinburgh drinking too many vegetarian energy drinks and ranting about money.

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.