Categories
- Arts & Entertainment
- Business
- Communications
- Computers
- Culture & Society
- Disease & Illness
- Fashion
- Finance
- Food & Beverage
- Health & Fitness
- Hobbies
- Home & Family
- Home Based Business
- Internet Business
- Legal
- Pets & Animals
- Politics
- Product Reviews
- Recreation & Sports
- Reference & Education
- Religion
- Self Improvement
- Shopping
- Travel & Leisure
- Vehicles
- Writing & Speaking
Information
How to Avoid Bankruptcy
Submitted: 2007-01-17 16:10:22
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher |
Many people who are overwhelmed with debt problems consider filing for bankruptcy. However, going bankrupt has a number of serious disadvantages and should be avoided if at all possible.
In this article we will discuss why bankruptcy should be avoided and possible alternatives to filing for bankruptcy.
Getting into debt is easy, especially with so many lenders offering you money via loans and credit cards. It is all to easy to run up huge bills when you are charged high rates of interest on your un-paid debt. Before you know it creditors are pounding on your door and you are too scared to open your mail. That’s when you think that bankruptcy might be the answer.
Contrary to popular misconception however, going bankrupt does not mean that you do not have to pay your debts. It simply allows the court to intervene and create a schedule for re-payment. Furthermore it opens you up to all sorts of penalties and disadvantages.
For example, if you are declared bankrupt you may lose your home and you will be unable to obtain credit over ?500. In addition to this, your bank accounts will be closed and you will have to hand over your credit cards to the courts. If you have a business, your company will be closed down and your employees will be dismissed. Plus, in the future you will not be allowed to be involved in forming, managing or promoting a company without the court’s permission.
There is also a huge social stigma associated with bankruptcy. This is because bankruptcies are announced in the local papers. So you will not be able to hide the fact that you have gone bankrupt.
So can you avoid bankruptcy? In 1986, the UK government introduced an alternative to bankruptcy called an IVA.
IVAs are formal and private agreements between a debtor and his creditors. In this agreement the debtor proposes to pay back an affordable amount of his debt each month.
In return the creditors write off a certain amount of the debt altogether and freeze interest on the debt. It is not unusual for as much as 85% of a debt to be written off and repayment amounts can be as low as ?200 a month. After five years, if the terms of the IVA have been adhered to then the debtor is declared debt free.
An IVA is a good alternative to bankruptcy because there are no stigmas or disadvantages associated with it.
Clear Start, the National Consumer Debt Advice Service offers free IVA advice to help you avoid bankruptcy: Alternative to Bankruptcy
Article source: Expert Articles
Most Recent Articles in Bankruptcy category
- How to Avoid Bankruptcy - By: Justin Narin
Bankruptcy offers some people a clean slate, it is by no means an easy solution. Bankruptcy will destroy your credit and may possibly force you to sell your assets. If you want to preserve your credit, you will be much better off if you do whatever you can to avoid bankruptcy. - Make Filing for Bankruptcy a Last Resort - By: Lee Bell
There are 2 main types of bankruptcy. If you can't avoid bankruptcy, determine between Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. - Life after bankruptcy is not so difficult - By: Jason Holmes
"Avoid bankruptcy" is the most common phrase; we come across in our everyday life. There are several disadvantages of bankruptcy. But if you are bankrupt, it is not very difficult to swim out of the situation. - Achieving Financial Security in an Unreliable Economy - By: Mohan Mittal
Financial Security is a false concept that developed in American society based on the idea that security comes from the perceived reliability of a regular or planned paycheck. Many people, believing in the commitment of their corporations to their well-being, have found themselves downsized, layed-off, outsourced, transferred, or, in some cases, even fired. The immediate reality becomes harshly apparent and sadly disappointing. - Bankruptcy - Is it the Last Option Only? - By: Michael Killian
Bankruptcy is available when all other debt payment measures have failed and the unpaid debt is simply beyond the means of the consumer to repay. It is essential, then, to understand debt options prior to bankruptcy and to determine which debt repayment method is the least detrimental. Additionally it is the law of the land that you know your debt repayment options prior to bankruptcy. - It’s Official; We Are Now A Bankrupt Society? - By: Stephen Morgan
The Government’s Insolvency Service claimed that 27,644 people were either made bankrupt or entered into an Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA) as a way to control or manage their debts in an ordered fashion.It was too early obviously to know how big a percentage of those who entered into an IVA had it failed by their manager or supervisor but it has been claimed previously that in some cases up to 50/60 percent of those entering an IVA fail to complete it in an orderly manner and therefore find themselves being made forcibly bankrupt at a later date.The other key statistic was that insolvencies were apparently 55% higher than during the comparable period this time last year and the smart money (to spoil the metaphor) is on the figure topping the 100,000 mark for the year. - Considerations Before Filing Bankruptcy - By: Jon Arnold
Financial difficulties can occur in anyone’s life. When you think financial difficulties are more than you can handle, don’t let bankruptcy become your first thought. Bankruptcy should be considered as a last resort, not just the first thing that pops into your head when the going gets tough. - People on Benefits No Longer Eligible for an IVA - By: Diana Middleton
The BBC has reported that people on UK state benefits will no longer be given an option of taking out an IVA to help pay off their debts.In an IVA or Individual Voluntary Arrangement people negotiate a repayment plan with their creditors with an Insolvency Practitioner acting on their behalf. Up to 80% of their debt is written off and interest on debt is frozen. - How Do Bankruptcy Loans' Requirements Work? - By: Kate Ross
Bankruptcy loan’s qualification is not an easy task. You need to overcome serious lender’s wariness about your ability and disposition for repaying the loan you are requesting. At this stage, you need to make no mistakes, your behavior has to be stainless and you need to show the lender that the past problems that led you to bankruptcy exist no more. - Bankruptcy Can Be Used As An Opportunity To Start Over And Reset Your Financial Goals - By: Jon Hansen
Bankruptcy is the last resort that neither the borrower nor the creditor wishes to meet. The impact of this to both sides is negative and long-lasting. Once you are bankrupt, it will remain on your credit report for many years, making it difficult to get any loan, insurance, or a job.
