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Do You Have An Action Plan For Debt Elimination?
Dr. Phil and Elizabeth Warren, professor at Harvard Law School and the
best-selling author of The Two-Income Trap, and All Your Worth, offer a
no-nonsense approach to getting out of debt.
Are you living above your means?
Do you only buy designer clothes, yet can't pay your electric bill?
Do you forfeit necessities like groceries so you can buy luxury items?
It's time to start thinking of your family's future. Think about what you're
teaching your children. Would your self-esteem suffer because you didn't have
designer pajamas for the baby or you didn't have a name brand tag tucked
into your sweater? Do your children love you because you wear name brand
clothing or because you're their parent and you love them and take good care
of them?
Are you making ends meet, but just can't seem to get ahead?
Do you own a nice home, have a nice car, but just barely squeak by at the
end of the month?
It's time to start living a life you can actually afford.
All it takes is one emergency, a few missed payments, and you could lose
everything. It is your responsibility to your children to be financially stable.
For either of these scenarios, the following are tips to get caught up and
start building a financially stable future:
Do something besides shop. Find a new hobby: Go to church, get involved in
community activities, sports, gardening. Teach your children how to cook.
Build new traditions with your children that center around your time
together, not how much money you spend.
Make Saturday a family day. Sit down with your kids at some point during the
week to discuss what to do on family day. Make family day a day filled with
educational and inexpensive activities, like watching a Disney video
together or cooking something new together. If you have to get away from
home, go to a museum, a library, a park or a zoo - anywhere but the mall.
Make a family pact not to go to the mall.
Sell the family "extras": motorcycle, big screen TV, etc. Put the
money into a savings account - it's about the family, not the toys.
Keep the roof over your head. You've got a responsibility to your children
to keep them warm and dry. Don't get behind on the rent. This should be a
priority or you could end up living with parents, or worse, in a shelter.
Sell your new car and get a used one. Eliminate the huge car payments by
purchasing a used car. You'll have more money and you'll be able to get from
here to there. You don't need a fancy SUV either. You can get just as many
car seats into a 1980 Suburban. Keep in mind, a new car loses 20-40 percent
of its value as soon as you drive it off the lot.
Put 20 percent of take-home pay toward debt repayment. When debts are paid
off, that 20 percent should go directly into savings. You need to prepare
for you and your children's future: house, college, retirement, etc.
Prioritize your debt:
1) Student loans
You don't have to pay them off at once, but keep up with your regular payments. Student loans carry a
huge legal obligation that can't be discharged in bankruptcy. They can
come in and seize your assets in a way that other creditors can't.
2) High interest debt (credit cards, home equity loans.)
If you can't be trusted to not use your credit cards, cut them up. Think about this:
$9,000 in credit card debt can take you 32 years to pay off and cost you
$22,000 in interest if you pay just the minimum payment. Try to pay three times
your minimum amount until it's paid off. Then put that amount of money
toward your next priority. Don't use your credit card again unless you have
the money to pay the balance off immediately
3) Other (medical bills, personal loans.)
Create emergency fund of $1,000. In case something unexpected happens,
you'll have a backup plan.
Use your checking account for paying bills only.
Take out a set amount of cash each month for clothes, toys, and extras. Use
only cash for these items. When it's gone, it's gone. No more cash
and no more extras until the first of the month.
Challenge everything. Get into a re-engineering mindset where nothing is
sacred. Do you really need to live in the house you live in? Can you
downsize? Can you move to a less expensive apartment/neighborhood for a
period of time? Do you really need that new vehicle? Do your kids really
need to have name brand clothing? If you really want your children in
private school, make a choice to cut out the extras. You do what you
have to do. Every time you spend money, think about what it's going toward and
whether it would feel better to have that cash in a savings account. Marble
counter tops look great in your home, but how would it feel to have that
$19,000 in your pocket instead?
Stay away from payday lenders. If they're living in your pockets,
there's never going to be a penny left over for you or your family.
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