Eliminating Credit Card Debt – Paying for Debt Settlement Is Not an Affordable Proposition
December 7, 2009 by Matthew Highlander
Filed under Debt Consolidation
We have all heard the radio advertisements for debt settlement firms promising to eliminate credit card debt. Unfortunately for the people that hire them, these companies do a much better job of selling their services than they do the job of delivering those promised results.
A typical consumer in debt cannot afford to pay for debt settlement services AND settle their credit card debts with what is left over. It would cost $2250-3000 to settle some reduction of $15,000 in debt. Debt settlement firms advise you stop paying the credit card companies and to start paying them instead. They take their fees out then wait for enough money to accumulate to make lump-sum payments to the consumer’s credit card banks. But, that typically will not happen until after those debts have been charged off and sold due to non-payment.
Debt settlement firms do not deliver what they promise, according to MSNBC. Some banks will not even work with debt settlement firms, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Due to Federal Reserve regulations, credit card companies write off their bad debts after six months. The difficulty is if an indebted consumer cannot save enough money with the debt settlement firm to settle the debt within six months, then they could be faced with bad credit, collection agencies and lawsuits.
Junk debt buyers buy bad debt from credit card banks in large chunks for 10 cents on the dollar. If a consumer has continued paying into a debt settlement program, by the time there is money for a reduced settlement, the original creditor no longer owns the debt. Then it is time to use consumer protection laws like the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act to fend off these parasites, according to the Credit Card Debt Survival Guide. If the consumer is unwise enough to settle with the junk debt buyer, the debt buyer will simply sell the unpaid balance to another junk debt buyer who will resume collection efforts.
Eliminating credit card debt through debt settlement is best accomplished on a do-it-yourself basis. Consumers must be ready to present a need-based case for a reduced balance settlement, according to the Credit Card Debt Survival Guide.
Matt Highlander researched the Credit Card Debt Survival Guide for consumers seeking to educate themselves about credit card debt relief. Matt Highlander is a contributing writer.
Beating Credit Card Debt Collectors at Their Own Game
November 23, 2009 by Matthew Highlander
Filed under Debt Collection
Most people would simply rather pay their credit card debts than deal with collection phone calls and collection attorney letters. But, what about those who cannot afford to make monthly minimum payments on their credit card debt? Many fall prey to the debt collection industry. Some, however, become educated consumers and use the law to force debt collectors to spend their time with other, less knowledgeable consumers.
Time is money for a credit card debt collector who is in the business of collecting unsecured consumer debt, most of which happens to be credit card debt. These consumer debt collectors and collection attorneys work on a percentage of what is collected. Most people think there is a debt collector for every debt, when the reality is there is only a debt collector for every easy-to-collect credit card debt.
Consumer debt collection has grown and prospered with the expansion of the credit card industry.
The Federal Reserve and Business Week report $133.7 billion of consumer debt in 1970 increased to $2.5 trillion of consumer debt in November 2007.
Each year debt collectors put more than $40 billion back into the U.S. economy, according to ACA International, a trade group for the debt collection industry.
There were 173 million credit cardholders in the United States in 2006, According to the U.S. Census Bureau.
4.75 percent of bank cards were delinquent in the first quarter of 2009, according to the American Banking Associate.
These statistics indicate debt collectors have millions of delinquent credit card accounts to collect from.
The Federal Reserve requires credit card companies to hold reserves for bad debts. The credit card companies profit from these debts after they are written off by selling them to junk debt buyers for no more than one penny on a dime, or 10 percent of their value. With that discount, junk debt buyers and their collection agencies and collection attorneys can be quite profitable by only collecting on 30 or 40 percent of the purchased accounts.
Debt collectors can make more money by pursuing delinquent credit card account holders who put up no resistance. Proper resistance to debt collection attempts usually causes debt collectors to look for less resistant targets. Effective resistance to credit card debt collectors relies on The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA).
The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act covers the behavior of collection agencies, junk debt buyers, and collection attorneys. The FDCPA treats attorneys as debts collectors, if they are collecting consumer debt. The consumer must be notified in writing by the debt collector of their right to dispute the debt and have it validated, according to the FDCPA. Copies of original documentation that verifies a debt are considered proper validation by the FDCPA. The FDCPA gives the consumer the right to tell the debt collector to stop collection activity until they have validated the debt.
Should the debt collector invest their time with those who properly dispute and request validation or those who put up no resistance?
Matt Highlander has researched credit counseling, debt settlement, debt collectors and collection attorneys. If you are seeking credit card debt relief, read Credit Card Debt Survival Guide

