Posts Tagged ‘consumer’
*Reduce Credit Card Debt with our Affordable Attorneys. Avoid Bankruptcy.
USOBA & TASC APPROVED! www,debtassistancerelief.org We have a very good track record of negotiating with credit card companies. Our experts in this credit debt reduction will negotiate with your creditors and will reduce your debts. http://debtassistancerelief.org/ There are many cases when the negotiation helped the debtor to reduce his debts by over 60%. We not only negotiate with your credit card companies for debt reduction but also consolidate your payments into small monthly installments. This monthly payment will be 40%-60% less than your current monthly payment, as most of the debt would have been eliminated. In case you have extra money left over, you will have the flexibility to pay higher amount to get out of debt even faster.
Duration : 0:0:59
Consumer Credit Card Consolidation Fraud
Consumer credit card debt, credit cards, consumer debt
Duration : 0:9:22
After the Financial Services Revolution: Deregulation, Bankruptcy Reform and Consumer Debt Crisis
February 8, 2007
Speaker: Robert D. Manning, PhD, Research Professor and Director, Center for Consumer Financial Services, Rochester Institute of Technology
Summary: The Frank J. Battisti Memorial Lecture
Banking deregulation has profoundly changed the financial services offered to consumers and the institutions that offer them. How has the dramatic erosion of federal and state regulation affected consumer usury laws, marketing policies, and consumer education? What are the factors that have shifted the focus of banks from corporate to consumer lending? How has the profitability of the industry changed and what does it mean to local banks? What factors are responsible to diluted loan underwriting standards? What role have credit cards played in this “revolution”? How have these changes influenced attitudes toward credit and debt now that America has a negative savings rate (first time since 1933)?
The financial services industry argued that consumer defaults on loans cost the average American over $400 simply because people are exploiting the bankruptcy law to avoid paying their debts. What are the economic realities to the industry? Can consumers expect lower cost products now that the bill was enacted? What are the most important changes in the law for consumers? What impact has the law had on bankruptcy filings? Who is responsible for soaring consumer bankruptcy rates? What role does homeownership play in the process of consumer bankruptcy?
Finally, how do we explain the dramatic change in social attitudes toward saving and consumer debt? When and why are Americans assuming record levels of debt? What are the implications of rising consumer debt to the future of American society? What are the near term consequences of consumer debt on retirement and social inequality? Is inheritance or rising property values the solution to the debt problem?
Dr. Manning’s lecture will explore all of these questions and conclude with a prediction that American society has about 10-15 years to reverse the consumer debt crisis or the U.S. will face a sharp decline in its standard of living and serious financial crises in 20-25 years — independent of the financial pressures of the retiring baby boomer “bulge.” Also, the failure to rapidly reverse the consumer debt crisis has enormous implications to the future global economic power of the U.S. as our dependence on cheap credit dwarfs our dependence on cheap energy.
Duration : 1:17:25
Toyota Revs Up Incentives; General Growth Bankruptcy Exit:Video
April 1 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Betty Liu reports on the latest breaking business news and top stories in today’s Business Briefs. (Source: Bloomberg)
Duration : 0:1:9
Credit Card Debt: Danger in Your Wallet – ASK THE EXPERT
http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2008/09/avoiding_overdrafts.html
Has the economic downturn affected Americans’ credit card use? Is credit card debt more harmful than other types of debt? Can we protect consumers from falling too deeply into credit card debt? Tim Westrich of the Center for American Progress weighs these questions in the latest installment of CAP’s ASK THE EXPERT series.
Duration : 0:2:42

