Monday, November 18, 2013

Why you are not Really Safe with Minimum Credit Card Payments?

If you have a balance in your credit card, you would better settle it before you find yourself in the most difficult situation. In one case, a 62 year old Francine Bostick who is a custodial manager living in Manhattan, Kansas, was faced with a tormenting experience with credit card debt. Francine Bostick and her husband James aged 74, together found themselves in a more than $120,000 credit card debt.

It took them more than 5 years to come out of their indebtedness situation. Because of the cheap credit available through these cards, Francine did not make certain considerations in her spending habits. She did not think twice about aspects like buying home appliances or even helping her children who have now grown to adults to meet their expenses. However, one time, things changed so fast and from one sweet moment of life, it became the turning point to a life full of desperation, fear, and discontent.


Francine said that they thought as long as they paid the minimum amount on their credit, everything was fine. When her husband developed dementia, this is when things turned haywire. As she was dealing with this serious health condition of her husband, on the other side, the card lenders began raising the required minimum payment.


Ms. Bostick points out some of the things she did which she thought were okay but they were not. She reckons that one mistake she might have made is being too supportive to her children even in situations where it was not necessary. By showing love through giving materials things, she used her credit card to help her adult children and overcompensated them in financial needs.


She tells of one instance in which her daughter was in college and she did not have insurance to cover her medical bills. She went on to help her meet the medical insurance needs. Ms. Bostick also laments that she sometimes bought stuff for her kids even when they did not ask for them. Whereas there is nothing bad about helping your children, the main point is; did she have the resources to keep supporting them even at the adult age?


Certainly, she overinvested in her children something that led to draining off of her credit card money. According to Eleanor Blayney, a certified financial planner and a consumer advocate at CFP Board (a nonprofit organization advocating for professional planning) she articulated the situation Ms. Bostick was facing as a confluence of events in her life.


In an effort to help in educating their children, parents are adding their indebtedness in the more than $1 trillion student loan debt. In a report presented by the New York Federal Reserve in 2012, it established that out of the student loan borrowers, about 5.3 percent were persons aged about 60 and above. This means that parents were taking the responsibility to borrow for their children’s education thus putting themselves into risks of being accountable for those credit card loans in future.


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