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workchoiced in amerika .....
The Centre for American
Progress reports ….. “Americans are worried about debt and believe it is just going to get worse. "The public is more worried about falling into debt, particularly from medical bills, than about being the victim of a terrorist attack or a natural disaster." According to a new poll sponsored by the Center for American Progress, 86 percent "insist the number of Americans having trouble with household debt has gone up in the last five years." Unfortunately, their worries are well-grounded in reality. The average American savings rate in 2005 was negative 0.5 percent, "the lowest since the Great Depression." As everyday expenses continue to rise, the problem of debt will continue to burden working Americans. Everyday household expenses are continuing to increase. Everything costs more today and it's harder
than ever for the working poor and middle-class to move up. The cost
of a college education grew by 24.6 percent between 2001 and 2004. Families
are borrowing more and falling further into debt. U.S. employers are scaling
back or canceling completely health care coverage for retirees and more
than two in five U.S. adults have problems paying medical bills, or have
accrued medical debt. The average national gas price has spiked up 11 cents
during the last two weeks to at least $3.00
per gallon, the second-highest level in U.S. history. "For the first
time on record, families have outstanding
debt that is greater than their incomes," according to an American
Progress report. Credit card debt is at record levels. Today, there are 1.5
billion credit cards in circulation in the United States — five for every
American man, woman, and child. Credit card debt "has grown to its highest
level on record. By 2004, the
typical family with credit card debt owed $2,150 (in 2004 dollars), up 62.9
percent since 1989." Low- and moderate-income households have been hit the
hardest. "Low-income families owed the equivalent of 9.5 percent of their
income on credit cards, while middle-class families owed 5.2 percent, and
high-income families owed 2.3 percent." Payday lending hurts the military and working poor, and pushes them
further into debt. Payday
lending is another scheme that hits the working poor who rely on costly forms
of credit. The Payday lender "offers small-sum (between $200 and $500),
high-fee ($15 to $35), short-term loans (generally two weeks) that result in
annual percentage rates (APRs) that often equal or exceed 400%." As a
result of the high-risk terms, borrowers are often forced to pay "another
high fee to roll over the loan for an additional two weeks or take out another
loan to pay off the first loan, thereby getting trapped in a costly and often
devastating cycle of 'back-to-back' loans." The payday scheme is a
national security issue as these lenders target service members, who are often
young and financially strapped for cash. A December 2004 New
York Times study revealed that 25 percent of military households have
used payday lenders and the Department of Defense has listed predatory lending
"as
one of the top 10 threats to members of the military."”
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the road to serfdom .....
‘Parents will be able to bequeath their mortgages to their children after a building society launched a home loan which doesn't need to be paid off before death.
The "inter-generational mortgage" allows homeowners to take out an interest-only loan and pass on the house - and the repayments on it - when they die.
Such arrangements are common in other countries including Switzerland and Japan, but are going on sale in Britain for the first time this week as buyers look for new ways to help their children on to the property ladder.
But experts expressed concern that the loans would be misunderstood and could saddle future generations with unwanted debt.’
Now Children Can Inherit Mortgage