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View Full Version : Bankruptcies 'soar' among young



ShadesWolf
06-12-2005, 08:35
Link to article in full (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4079846.stm)

These bits are scary


More than 10,000 people went bankrupt in the first three months of 2005, the highest figure in more than forty years.


A series of interest rate rises over the past year have also put additional strain on many people's already-stretched finances.


So everybodys life is not roses


Many twentysomethings are also amassing huge debts in order to pay for university study.


And we allow these muppets to vote, its no wonder this country is in such a bad state of affairs......



The number of young people going bankrupt has risen sharply in the past two years, according to new figures, as personal debt levels have mounted.
PricewaterhouseCoopers said personal bankruptcies among the under-30s accounted for 15% of all failures in 2003-4.

That figure was almost double that of 2001-2 as more people chose bankruptcy as a way of eliminating their debts.

Young women are also more likely to declare themselves bankrupt.

Female rise

Men still account for almost two in three personal bankruptcies but cases among women are becoming more common, according to PwC, which analysed figures produced by the Insolvency Service.

The number of women finding themselves in irreversible financial difficulty rose 45% between 2001-2 and 2003-4.

More than 10,000 people went bankrupt in the first three months of 2005, the highest figure in more than forty years.

Critics believe this is a result of a cultural shift in society towards greater tolerance of debt.

Pain relief?

A series of interest rate rises over the past year have also put additional strain on many people's already-stretched finances.

PwC said the evidence pointed to a new class of bankrupt who was under 30 and has not been in business before.

Concern has grown over the amount of credit card debt incurred by young people, many of whom are attracted by interest-free introductory offers on cards.

Many twentysomethings are also amassing huge debts in order to pay for university study.

Changes to the law enacted last year have lessened the stigma attached to bankruptcy.

Most people can now be discharged from the constraints of bankruptcy - including the use of any earnings to repay debts and a bar on holding public office - within a year as opposed to the previous three.

Pat Boyden, a specialist partner in PwC's business recovery division, said bankruptcy seemed an attractive option to many young people to ease the "immediate pain" of huge debts.

Pain remains

However, he warned that bankruptcy was not a pain-free option.

It could affect someone's credit rating for up to six years, making it much harder for them to get a mortgage or any form of credit.

"I don't know how much people have thought about the repercussions, the main one being that their credit rating is nil for six years," he told the BBC.

"There will be a six-year period when they might be in a sort of credit purdah.

"If that is between the age of 24 and 30, that is a important time in someone's life when they may struggle to get hold of any plastic."

bmolsson
06-13-2005, 05:34
Persons can't go bankrupt. The definition of bankrupt is that the one bankrupt sieze to exist.......

doc_bean
06-13-2005, 08:55
Apparently, in some countries they can !

Weird.

Sigurd
06-13-2005, 08:56
I just borrowed 2.7 mill NoK ($416 103,75 or €344 115,50) to fund my house building project.
I'll be a debtslave for the next... 20 years.

TonyJ
06-13-2005, 13:01
Personal bankrupcy is an option in the UK - it really is a VERY last resort and there are other, often better, alternatives before it gets that far.

I do think this country is sitting on a timebomb as far as credit goes

Al Khalifah
06-13-2005, 16:03
I do think this country is sitting on a timebomb as far as credit goes
Lets go after the Church and disolve the monasteries again. That's always a great way to restore a nations finances.

TonyJ
06-13-2005, 18:50
Heh heh heh . . . . . .

Now there's an idea :devil:

Ldvs
06-14-2005, 18:27
I just borrowed 2.7 mill NoK ($416 103,75 or €344 115,50) to fund my house building project.
I'll be a debtslave for the next... 20 years.
They didn't mention the outstanding impact the housing loans have on a menage's financial situation. The low interest rates are luring people into a trap.

As far as I know, in France, when you owe too much you can't go bankrupt (only merchants, farmers and a specific registered category can). You may be eligible to start a judiciary procedure instead which will prevent your creditors from suing you and claim everything you own. You'll have to repay your debts but according to a new calendar, though.

monkian
06-14-2005, 19:43
Many twentysomethings are also amassing huge debts in order to pay for university study.


And we allow these muppets to vote, its no wonder this country is in such a bad state of affairs......


I find that offensive. I'm sure I'm not the only 'twenty something' on here who has thousands of pounds of student loans to pay off.

If I didn't have to pay to get a University education - or was given a grant then I wouldn't have had to borrow that amount of money.

Plus the price of housing is ridiculous at the moment (even for shabby student flats) doesn't help matters at all.

If you've just come out of school and your bank offers you a credit card are you going to turn it down ?

I think you should re-word your statement, I object to being called a muppet.

bmolsson
06-15-2005, 04:01
It really sux to be poor......

Papewaio
06-15-2005, 04:11
Many twentysomethings are also amassing huge debts in order to pay for university study.



And we allow these muppets to vote, its no wonder this country is in such a bad state of affairs.... (BTW use three dots for ellipses and a fourth if it is the end of the sentence anything else is below Org standards... and yes the Moderators have had a long discussion on this ~;) ~D )

So you are stating that only the rich should be allowed to both get a universtiy education and vote at the same time?

bmolsson
06-15-2005, 05:24
(BTW use three dots for ellipses and a fourth if it is the end of the sentence anything else is below Org standards... and yes the Moderators have had a long discussion on this ~;) ~D )


Why would the moderators have a problem with this statement ? It might be silly, but it's not really offensive against any one in praticular.



So you are stating that only the rich should be allowed to both get a universtiy education and vote at the same time?


Well, if so then it's sad. But in the future, many societies might end up in a situation where this is true. Money will have a more important role in educational choices as well as in the political process.