Debt in a downturn: debt management can help
January 21, 2009 by JoelC2009
Responding to recent debt-related comments from Nick Clegg, Leader of the Liberal Democrats, debt management company Gregory Pennington reminded consumers that tackling their debt problems is more important than ever in an economic downturn.
New analysis, states the Liberal Democrats’ website, reveals that personal debt has risen by a total of one trillion pounds in the past eleven years – a startling ten million pounds for every hour the Labour government has been in power. Repayments to that collective personal debt stand at almost £95 billion per year, or £3,000 per second.
“Much of that debt, of course, is in the form of mortgage debt,” said a spokesperson for the debt management company. “According to the latest figures from the Bank of England (Lending to individuals: September 2008), individuals now owe a total of around £1,460 billion – and a full £1,220 billion of that total is secured against dwellings.”
“Mortgage debt is still a serious issue, with many homeowners having over-extended themselves in order to get a foot on the housing ladder. Even so, taking on a debt to acquire an asset is fundamentally different from borrowing in order to finance a lifestyle, or to pay for food, gas or petrol, as many people have grown used to doing in recent years.
“After all, the vast majority of non-homeowners still need to make monthly payments, in the form of rent. In other words, a mortgage debt needn’t actually add to an individual’s monthly financial burden – in fact, their monthly mortgage payments may well cost less than the rent payments they would need to make to live in a comparable property.
“Even so, Mr Clegg raises some valid points. Britain’s level of personal debt is, as he puts it, ‘unrivalled anywhere in the world outside of the US’, and this can be particularly dangerous in the context of a global economic downturn. Clearly, people with higher levels of personal debt are more at risk of running into severe financial problems more or less as soon as their income drops. People with little or no debt are, in general, much better placed to cope with any financial problems they may encounter as a result of the global downturn.
“As a debt management company, we specialise in debt management plans that help people bring their unsecured debts under control. But debt management is by no means the only way of coping with (and reducing) high levels of unsecured debt. People with debt problems may find they have a range of debt solutions to choose from, and should talk to a professional adviser as soon as possible – the sooner they do this, the more likely they are to get through any financial problems that may lie ahead.
“In the longer term,” the spokesperson for the debt management company concluded, “we wholeheartedly support Mr Clegg’s call for financial literacy to play a much bigger part in education. As he says, ‘maths for life is more important than trigonometry for most people’ – financial education is clearly a key part of helping future generations avoid the kind of debt problems that so many of today’s adults are facing.”

I think your friend is lying. You don't start at $ 400,000, but you might eventually work up to that salary or maybe even more.
You would be more like to make $ 5 million with a big investment bank with a degree in finance rather than exonomics if any are still hiring after the bailout.
The Media has lot to answer for!
Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg today warned that he would not prop up a Labour government which had collapsed to third in the popular vote.
A vote for the Liberal Democrats is a vote for the pound, writes David Marsh.
the song is called “nessum dorma” like u can read in the title of the video
Cabinet has ruled that ministers may not accept any payment for helping to organise the 2010 Fifa World Cup, government spokesperson Themba Maseko says.
They never found the plot in the first place.
Higher and higher taxation with nothing to show for it, their broken pledge on the EU referendum and the economy on a downward slope, despite Brown's boast that he was such a good Chancellor, are not likely to maintain the public's trust. The country is massively in debt, we have no idea who has entered the country and we are swamped by immigrants without the infra structure to support this vast increase in the population.
The only plot this lot has ever had is how to stay in power.
Theresa May averts fight over 28-day detention with call for renewal -
#debt : Credit Card & Debt Management: A Step-By-Step How-To Guide for Organizing Debt & Saving Money on…