The current financial crisis is all-inclusive; our
path to prosperity or even simple financial
stability seemingly obliterated.
With every furlough, layoff or stock market drop,
Americans of all ages and backgrounds are seeing
their incomes dwindle, bills pile up and financial
options disappear
The number who are suffering has increased by 3
million the past year, according to a recent Gallup-Healthways
survey. Some 37% of us said we were worried about
money last week. Last year, 3.2 million consumers
contacted the National Foundation for Credit
Counseling, up from 2.2 million in 2007 and 1.4
million in 2006.
"What's happening to families is a perfect storm,"
says Bob Manning, a finance professor at Rochester
Institute of Technology.
The personal stories illustrate how unemployment,
health problems, shrinking retirement savings,
unaffordable mortgages and other financial stressors
lead to unprecedented challenges, worry and
consequences. Recent history has shown periods when
one area of concern consumed a family — a lost job
for six weeks, for example — but nothing like this.
And while people once could piece together solutions
to recover financially or prevent outright financial
ruin, fewer options exist today.
Whether you're in a financial crisis depends on your
debt problem, says Steve Bucci, president of the
Money Management International Financial Education
Foundation, a non-profit organization. If you are
less than 90 days late on a credit card bill, that's
not a crisis. But if you are 90 days late on your
mortgage, that's an earthquake, and if you are one
month late on your car loan you might lose the car,
Bucci says.
"For many, it's not one particular event, as much as
it is life events starting to pile up," says Gerri
Detweiler, co-author of Reduce Debt, Reduce Stress.
"And it's compounded by the economy and the lack of
credit options that are available."
Retirement on the line
The elderly have been harder hit than most. Personal
bankruptcy filings among those 65 and older jumped
150% from 1991 through 2007, according to a study
released last year by AARP. Although they have been
known as the most frugal savers, today, many of them
are deep in debt and without a safety net.
Howard Zynkian, 89, filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy
more than a year ago to help him save his home.
Unlike Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which allows people to
have most unsecured debts discharged, Chapter 13
sets up a plan for the filer to repay most debts
over several years.
But Zynkian, who lives in El Cajon, Calif.,
refinanced his home five years ago and didn't
understand that he was getting into a risky,
alternative mortgage. After his monthly mortgage
payment had jumped from $1,500 to $2,700, he was
facing foreclosure.
The retired dentist had used up all of his
retirement savings to pay his rising mortgage bills.
He cares for his daughter, who has severe back
problems, and together they receive about $2,900 a
month in Social Security.
This week, after much effort, he was able to get a
loan modification from his lender. Now he will pay
$1,269 a month on a 3% loan rate. After five years
it will go up to 4% and then six years later, it
will move to 5% for the rest of the term.
"I can just barely manage it," he says.
Zynkian's story is an example of how critical events
are coming together for people in every life stage,
from the youngest to the oldest, says Melissa
Jacoby, a law professor at the University of North
Carolina.
"And we used to assume that the elderly had already
built wealth in their homes, and that was part of
their retirement plan," she says.
Even those who are still working often have less
money available to contribute to their retirement
plans. Those who are retired and kept most of their
401(k) plans or IRAs invested in stocks have in many
cases watched the funds lose half their values.
"The rules seem to have changed, and so they do many
silly things," Bucci says.
For example, retirement savings are being used now
for paying bills. The golden rule for retirement
planning and funds: People still need to continue to
save for the long term, and their 401(k) will be a
fundamental part of their retirement, says Brent
Neiser, director of Strategic Programs and Alliances
for the National Endowment for Financial Education.
And when stocks and other investments go down, one
could consider them a blue-light special and buy
more.
But those close to retirement should keep adding to
savings, try to work longer and claim Social
Security later, so that the monthly check is larger.
Especially if your retirement savings can provide
only temporary financial help, you shouldn't rely on
it now.
What to do before layoffs
Few life changes affect finances as much as a lost
job.
Last year, Amy and Mike Dew, from Sanford, N.C.,
both were laid off from jobs. It took Mike about
nine months to find a new job. Amy, who lost her job
in November, just started working again this month.
They are earning much less.
"We literally went from almost a $100,000 salary to
probably $50,000 for the two of us," Amy says.
Recently the Dews, who have two teenage daughters,
filed for bankruptcy. They gave up one car and their
home.
Last month, the national jobless rate was 8.1%, the
highest in more than 25 years.
If you expect to lose your job or have your salary
slashed, get prepared. Try now to implement a very
bare-bones budget and prioritize expenses. "It gives
you a better sense of what you can and cannot handle
if you lose your job," Detweiler says.
If you are without a job, consider making only
minimum payments, using a line of credit as long as
it's available, and keeping your money in a safe
place, such as an FDIC-insured bank account. "You
need to save your cash because when your cash is
gone you're out of luck," Bucci says.
Medical bills can be a problem
Health problems and taking care of family members
add up to a double whammy of costs: financial and
emotional.
Ardella Mitchell, 44, who is raising her 16-year-old
son and two grandchildren, has lupus and
fibromyalgia. "I get sick a lot, and I'll always
have it."
Mitchell, who lives in Cleveland, works as a nursing
assistant and schedules her hours based on how well
she feels. She recently filed for bankruptcy because
her husband is unemployed.
"I had a lot of medical bills that I couldn't pay
because I don't have insurance," she says.
Health problems often trigger bankruptcy filing,
Jacoby says. And even people with health insurance
sometimes become overwhelmed with medical debt.
When families are hit by a combination of serious
illness and debt, they should quickly seek help from
a credit counselor and a bankruptcy lawyer.
If you don't have health insurance, negotiate the
best cost for treatment. If you do have insurance,
try to renegotiate the payment dates on bills not
covered.
Trying to keep your home
The biggest debt for most of us — our mortgages —
has been at the center of the economic collapse.
Sandra Barker and her husband chased the American
dream from South Florida to Houston in 2005 hoping
for better career options. Sandra is an executive
search consultant, and her husband worked in sales.
But their jobs didn't pan out as they thought, and
they returned to Florida about eight months later.
"When we came back, it was really painful because
the (housing) prices were at their peak," she says.
They bought a home with a hefty mortgage. Last
December, they filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy
because her husband had lost his job and was in an
accident. Debts were mounting, but they wanted to
keep their home.
Home foreclosures are still rising in many markets,
and that is causing prices to continue to fall. At
least in some cities, home sales are starting to
improve. And there are more options to help
homeowners reduce their mortgages.
The House has approved a plan to give debt-strapped
homeowners a chance to lower mortgage payments via
bankruptcy courts. And the Senate is considering
loan modification legislation.
For most families, the traditional wisdom is to
always pay for your mortgage when debt mounts,
Jacoby says.
"When people have so many competing bills to pay, it
is difficult to decide what to do," she says. "But
if you want to keep your home you're going to have
to pay for your mortgage, even if you file for
bankruptcy."
Credit counseling can help
Oscar Garcia, 57, filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy
two years ago to cope with rising credit card debt.
He kept up with his mortgage payments and wanted to
keep his home.
But then last year, his job in New Jersey was
eliminated, and the company closed. His wife was
diagnosed with breast cancer and had surgery
followed by chemotherapy.
He doesn't have health care, and COBRA coverage for
unemployed workers proved too costly. He is up to
date with his mortgage but is worried that if he
doesn't get a job he'll lose the home.
"He is a typical immigrant story who came here and
picked himself up, doing well, raising a family,"
says his bankruptcy lawyer, Mark Goldman. "But now
20 years later he loses his job, and he won't be
able to retire."
Home equity loans and credit cards can't cover for
debt anymore.
"Many of the safety nets are drying up," Jacoby
says. "So we see people engaging in more informal
borrowing from friends and family, who are also in
difficult financial trouble."
When the typical solutions disappear and problems
mushroom, many people panic. Some respond by
ignoring their plight as long as they can, while
others make sudden choices without seeking the
advice of experts.
Several initiatives are being launched by the
government, organizations and the private sector to
help financially strapped people survive. But just
comprehending the programs and finding out if you
qualify is challenging, Neiser says. And that is
where a non-profit credit-counseling organization,
which is not selling anything, can help.
"Finances are so personal that we're almost
suggesting that people hold up a mirror to look at
themselves and their money and what's going on
there," Neiser says. "But then they should look
outside of themselves to find out what are some of
the smart things they should be doing as they move
forward."