The Medical Bills You Shouldn’t Pay

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The Medical Bills You Shouldn’t Pay

By Chd Terhune 
Provided by Business Week

As health-care costs continue to soar, millions of confused consumers are paying medical bills they don’t actually owe. Typically this occurs when an insurance plan covers less than what a doctor, hospital, or lab service wants to be paid. The health-care provider demands the balance from the patient. Uncertain and fearing the calls of a debt collector, the patient pays up.

Most consumers don’t realize it, but this common practice, known as balance billing, often is illegal. When doctors or hospitals think an insurer has reimbursed too little, state and federal laws generally bar the medical providers from pressuring patients to pay the difference. Instead, doctors and hospitals should be wrangling directly with insurers.

Economists and patient advocates estimate that consumers pay $1 billion or more a year for which they’re not responsible.

Yolanda Fil, a 59-year-old McDonald’s  cashier in Maple Shade, N.J., got tangled up with balance billing after gall bladder surgery in 2005. She and her husband, Leon, a retired state transportation worker, have coverage through Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey. Horizon made payments on Fil’s behalf to the hospital, surgeon and anesthesiologist. Then, in 2006, Vanguard Anesthesia Associates billed Fil for an unpaid balance of $518. Soon, a collection agency hired by Vanguard started calling Fil once a week, she says. Although she thought her co-payment and insurance should have covered the surgery, Fil eventually paid the $518, plus a $20 transaction fee. “I didn’t have any choice,” she says. “They threatened me with bad credit.”

CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE

Luckily for Fil, her insurer decided to get tough with Vanguard. In December 2006, Horizon Blue Cross sued the medical practice for balance billing Fil and more than 8,000 other policyholders who received invoices for a total of $4.3 million for service from 2004 to 2006. A New Jersey judge last year ordered Vanguard to stop billing the patients and provide refunds to those who had paid. Fil is awaiting her $538 refund. Vanguard didn’t respond to requests for comment.

National statistics aren’t available, but there’s little doubt that many consumers unwittingly fall victim to balance billing.

The California Association of Health Plans, a trade group in Sacramento, estimates that 1.76 million policyholders in that state received such bills in the past two years, totaling $528 million. The group found that 56% paid the bills. “Patients think they owe this money, and it causes tremendous stress and anxiety for people,” says Cindy Ehnes, director of the California Managed Health Care Dept. “It is inappropriate to put the patient in the middle of this.”

Balance billing most frequently occurs when medical providers participating in a managed-care network believe the plan’s insurer is imposing too deep a discount on medical bills or is taking too long to pay. California, New Jersey and 45 other states ban in-network providers from billing insured patients beyond co-payments or co-insurance required by the plan. Similarly, federal law prohibits providers from billing Medicare patients for unpaid balances.

These laws require medical providers to seek payment only from the insurer for services covered by the plan. Many states also shield insured patients from balance billing by out-of-network hospitals and doctors in emergencies, since patients usually don’t control who treats them in those situations. (Bans on balance billing generally don’t apply when a patient gets an elective procedure, such as cosmetic surgery, or seeks out-of-network, non-emergency service without a referral.)

Some physicians, hospitals and labs take advantage of consumer befuddlement, argues Jane Cooper, CEO of Patient Care, a Milwaukee firm that employers hire to help insured workers fight billing mistakes. “Medical providers count on the fact people will pay these bills because they don’t have time to figure it out,” Cooper says.

Quest Diagnostics, the country’s largest lab chain, with revenue last year of $6.7 billion, has faced investigations and lawsuits over allegations of balance billing. A private suit that seeks class-action status in federal court in Newark, N.J., alleges that Quest has balance-billed thousands of patients covered by private insurance and Medicare, turning over many accounts to debt collectors. Quest, based in Madison, N.J., denies any wrongdoing.

In a separate case in 2003, the New York Attorney General’s Office alleged that Quest encouraged consumers to overpay or billed them after Quest had already been paid by insurers. The company denied wrongdoing in the New York case and said only five people were due modest refunds. Quest agreed to pay New York $150,000 in legal costs and revise some practices, such as waiting longer to dun patients while a claim is pending with an insurer. A Quest spokeswoman says: “The vast majority of our transactions occur problem-free when correct information is provided by patients, physicians and payers.”

As some authorities get tougher, physicians are trying to overturn prohibitions on balance billing. The American Medical Association is lobbying Congress to allow balance billing within the Medicare program, as was allowed until 1991. Two Republican congressmen, Tom Feeney of Florida and Tom Price of Georgia, have sponsored legislation that would accomplish that goal. The AMA cites declining reimbursements from Medicare and private insurers in support of its bid to bill patients directly. AMA member David McKalip, a neurosurgeon in St. Petersburg, Fla., says patients can trust doctors to behave ethically and not gouge the poor: “Doctors will know up front which patients are willing to pay” beyond what the government reimburses.

FIGHTING BACK

Consumers overwhelmed by medical bills might dispute that. Many lack the resources to fight balance billing on their own. With an eye on their legal fees, private attorneys hesitate to take on individual disputes over amounts that usually don’t exceed $1,000.

Glenn Siglinger is one exception. He fought a lengthy battle against a surgeon all the way to the Connecticut Supreme Court. In 2006 that court upheld a trial verdict awarding the Siglinger family nearly $40,000 in punitive damages from a doctor.

The case began in December 1995, when Siglinger’s wife, Laura, and his daughter, Allison, then 3, were injured in a car accident. Both were taken to the emergency room at Bridgeport Hospital, where Dr. Charles Gianetti, the plastic surgeon on call, stitched a cut on Allison’s face. The Siglingers’ insurer paid Gianetti $1,981 under a contract with the family’s health plan. Later in 1996, he claimed the Siglingers owed him an unpaid balance of $4,496. The Siglingers refused to pay, and Gianetti sued them. Ruling for the Siglingers, the trial judge ordered Gianetti to pay their legal fees, in addition to the punitive damages. The Siglingers say he hasn’t paid them anything.

“It was traumatic enough seeing my daughter go through a serious accident, but then to go through this,” says Siglinger, a real estate investor. He and his wife have since divorced; Allison is now 15. “I wonder how many people paid these bills without giving it a second thought,” he says. The Siglingers are among 150 patients Gianetti has sued for unpaid balances, according to state records. The Connecticut Attorney General’s Office is scheduled to go to trial next year against Gianetti, having accused him in a civil suit of improper billing.

Gianetti, 69, no longer practices medicine, but he continues to pursue former patients in court. He says the state of Connecticut has “nothing on me,” declining other comment.

Even routine office visits can lead to balance billing.

In Illinois, federal prosecutors say Dr. Janet Despot and Rickey Weir, her husband and office manager at the Cardinal Respiratory medical practice in Springfield, overbilled Medicare, private insurers, and patients by more than $800,000 from 1997 through 2007. Despot, 50, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of balance-billing Medicare patients in February. She didn’t receive jail time, but has paid a $10,000 fine and forfeited $2.5 million that will be used for restitution and additional fines. Federal officials are considering barring her from the Medicare program; the Illinois medical board separately is seeking to discipline her. For now she remains in business.

William Gass, a 41-year-old recycling coordinator, successfully took Despot to small-claims court in 1999 to get $300 in improper bills erased from his credit report. “It’s unconscionable to me she can still practice medicine,” Gass says.

Despot says her husband, Weir, from whom she is getting divorced, handled all billing. She claims she wasn’t aware that patients were being hounded for money they didn’t owe. A Medicare ban “would end my career,” she says. “I didn’t understand medical billing.” Weir has pleaded not guilty to fraud charges and awaits trial in November. He declined to comment.

Regulators in most states have been slow to take action in billing disputes. But in July, California officials sued Prime Healthcare Services, seeking to force the 12-hospital chain based in Victorville, Calif., to stop balance billing. Last September, Thomas Lai was rushed to the emergency room at Prime’s Huntington Beach Hospital because of severe chest pain. The 51-year-old musician stayed for four days, but doctors didn’t find anything seriously wrong.

His wife, Tess, says she asked the hospital staff to transfer Thomas to a hospital covered by his Kaiser Permanente network — but to no avail. She had taken him to the hospital closest to home, which Kaiser advised her to do. Kaiser paid a discounted rate for the hospitalization, and the Lais thought that was the end of it.

They were shocked to receive a bill from Prime in May for more than $16,000. A collection firm threatened to report them to credit agencies. “I’m concerned about our credit report with this huge bill hanging over us,” Tess says. Kaiser instructed the Lais not to pay anything while the state case unfolds.

Asked about the state action, Prime said: “This frivolous suit is not about the actions of one provider but the failure of the [state] to do its job to regulate HMOs and provide assistance to providers who have the right to be reimbursed properly for emergency services rendered to HMO enrollees.” Prime didn’t comment on the Lais.

Cindy Ehnes, the director of California’s managed-care department, says her agency isn’t taking sides between providers and insurers. It holds insurers accountable for paying promptly, she says. Medical providers should use proper channels to press their claims, such as an independent dispute-resolution system crafted by the state, she adds. “Patients are having their credit destroyed at a time when they are already sick and vulnerable.”

Huge Medical Bills You Shouldn’t Pay

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The following is from CBS News’ official website:

Several months after back surgery, Linda Burdick sat holding a hospital bill for almost $60,000.

And this was after her insurance had paid its share of the bill. She had no idea she’d be billed for anything close to that amount.

“And just said to my husband, ‘Oh my God, we’re going to owe $60,000 to the hospital. How are we ever going to pay that?’”

The bill Burdick received is called a “balance bill.” When the insurance company doesn’t pay the total charge, doctors and hospitals often bill patients for the balance. The problem is, millions of balance bills these days are either illegal - or they are highly inflated.

Last year in California alone, the insurance industry reported that 1.7 million patients had been “balance billed” $528 million above what the patients owed.

Burdick hired two billing investigators. After demanding an itemized accounting, health care navigators Lin Osborn and Beth Morgan believe Burdick was overcharged by $40,000, for items like six surgical screws - at $1,750 each. They say overbilling is now the norm.

“Outright wrong is 100 percent,” Osborn said. “I’ve never seen a hospital bill that I thought followed all the regulations correctly. Not once.”

Burdick’s hospital, the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, declined an on-camera interview, but said in a statement that her bill was set by her insurance and “is not determined by the hospital.” Hospital officials said they have “no evidence of overcharges in her bill, but would be willing to correct any mistakes.”

Burdick also asked her state attorney general, Richard Blumenthal, for help. Blumenthal’s office has handled thousands of balance bill complaints.

“There’s no explanation for some of them except purposeful balance billing or overcharging,” Blumenthal said.

“If you don’t fight, you are going to lose,” Burdick said.

Burdick’s fight applies to anyone with a suspect medical bill. All patients have the right to an itemized bill. Any charge can be disputed directly with the hospital.

Patients can complain to their state attorney general and, as Linda did, contact a medical billing advocate. Burdick says she’s still working with Beth Israel Hospital hoping to bring that $60,000 bill into better balance.

Home Equity Loans: A Flexible Option to Cater All Your Needs

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It really feels great to have a house of your own. It not only gets added up in your assets but can also become an excellent source of credit when you need it the most. In other words, your home can turn out to be a great source of money when you fall in urgent need of funds. This has been made possible with the help of a home equity loan.

Home equity is the ownership value tied up in a home or a property which estimates the current market value of the house. This amount does not include any remaining mortgage payments. Thus, home equity is calculated by deducting the unpaid balance of the mortgage and any outstanding debt over the home from the home’s actual market value.

The home loans are categorized in two segments- the standard Home Equity Loans and the home equity line of credit. The standard home equity loan offers a debtor with a particular amount of money that has a fixed interest rate and payments. These loans have to be paid in a fixed time period. These loans offer a larger loan amount as its borrowers are allowed to re-borrow the loan amount that they had already paid in the past.

A home equity loan is always secured in nature as it requires you to pledge your homes’ equity as collateral. These loans offer low interest rate, help you become debt free, allow you to borrow up to 100% of your home’s value and the loan payments usually come with certain tax advantages.

The value of equity can be used for various purposes. These include availing loan and to invest for getting a high interest rate. Borrowers may use this loan amount for making home improvements, for college tuition or for things like investing in business ventures like purchasing additional property. Thus, a home equity loan is an alluring option for all those homeowners who require quick cash for any of their urgent needs.

George Kane has no formal degree in finance, but years of work that he has put in the finance industry makes him perfectly eligible to be called an expert in financial matters.

Unsecured Loans: Best option for tenant or non-homeowners

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Unsecured Loans: Best option for tenant or non-homeowners

Whether you wish to buy a car or go on a holiday or renovate your home, you feel short of finances at some or the other point of time. The best option is to apply for loans. People who seek a loan without any security can opt for unsecured loans. Availing a loan without property is easy these days. These loans come with a higher rate of interest but at the same time fulfil all your financial needs.

Unsecured loans are taken to meet your multiple demands without any risk. Buy an expensive car, go for higher education, plan your wedding expenses, do whatever you like with the loan amount. These loans are offered by simply filling an application form online. People who are suffering from a bad credit history like defaulters, CCJs, IVAs and bankrupts can also avail the benefits of the non secured loans. These people may have to deal with some paperwork but they would not have any hassles while approval. The amount sanctioned would depend on your repayment capability and financial capacity.

We can say that these loans are the best option for tenant or non-homeowners. Unsecured loan can be taken without placing any security. So, one does not need to worry about losing his valuable asset. The lenders have risk so they approve the loan on the basis of borrower’s income and repayment capability. The interest rates charged is usually higher than secured loans as they have a risk factor involved. But the borrower can get a reasonable interest rate by researching carefully. Borrowers with a bad credit history need to convince the lenders that they can repay the loan amount.

By going online, one can compare quotes of various lenders and select a lender offering the lowest rate. Online processing does not require any credit check. Go online and compare the rates charged by different lenders. Instant unsecured loans can be taken for emergencies. There are lots of benefits of fast loans which include: no requirement of security, no credit checks, fast approval and bad credit acceptable.

Online loans are preferred by most of the people who look for instant processing and fast approval of loans without any security.

If you are not a homeowner, you can still avail an unsecured personal loan. Fulfil your personal purposes like cured loan for personal purpose like holiday tour, debt consolidation, buying a car, wedding, etc. If you are earning enough that you can repay the instalments on time, you can avail this loan. Due to the risks involved, lenders tend to charge a high rate of interest. The loan amount may vary and can range upto £25000 depending on your income. The repayment duration may vary from 5 to 15 years.

Whether you have a bad credit history or defaulting on payments or have arrears and CCJs, you can avail these loans. You can prove your repayment ability in front of the lenders. Online lenders are preferred as they offer competitive rate loans.

One can find a variety of lenders online offering competitive rates of interests. The online mode is preferred because it is fast and easy. In a few clicks, one can get what he is looking for.

With the help of online research, the borrowers have the facility of comparing various deals and select the lowest rate deal according to their repayment capacity. In short, we can say that unsecured personal loans provide loans without putting any property at stake.

Credit Card Bond Spreads Reach Record Over Benchmarks

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Credit Card Bond Spreads Reach Record Over Benchmarks
By Sarah Mulholland

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) — Yields relative to benchmark rates on securities backed by credit card debt rose to records amid concern that falling household income will curtail spending and make it harder for consumers to pay their bills.

Spreads on credit card asset-backed securities of different ratings and maturities rose by 10 basis points to 50 basis points during the week ended Aug. 28, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Credit card bonds rated AAA and maturing in five years rose 15 basis points from the week earlier to 150 basis points more than the benchmark swap rate, analysts led by Christopher Flanagan in New York wrote in an Aug. 29 report.

Investors are retreating from securities backed by credit card loans following a slowdown in consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the U.S. economy. Delinquencies are rising as Americans rely more on the debt to cover expenses because falling home values are causing banks to restrict access to home-equity lines of credit.

“The focus is on the weakened consumer,” Christopher Sullivan, chief investment officer at United Nations Federal Credit Union in New York, said today in a telephone interview. “The consumer is severely pinched, and we are likely to see this trend in consumer ABS products continue.”

More than $358 billion of credit card asset-backed securities were outstanding as of the first quarter, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. Spreads have surged as the credit crunch has damped investor appetite for all but the safest U.S. government debt.

American Express

American Express Co. paid 130 basis points more than the one-month London interbank offered rate in its last sale of AAA asset-backed debt on Aug. 8, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The company paid 4 basis points over Libor on similar debt sold in July 2007. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

New York-based American Express had a credit-card delinquency rate of 3.42 percent as of July, Bloomberg data show. Uncollectible debt rose to 5.3 percent of loans from 2.9 percent a year earlier and will climb as the year progresses, American Express Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Chenault said on July 21.

Consumer purchases slowed to an increase of 0.2 percent in July, one-third the pace in June, the Commerce Department said Aug. 29. Incomes dropped 0.7 percent, the first decrease since August 2005.

U.S. consumers borrowed more than twice as much as economists forecast in June. Consumer credit rose by $14.3 billion, the most since November, to $2.59 trillion, according to the Federal Reserve.

The five-year swap rate, a borrowing benchmark, is currently 3.96 percent. One-month Libor is set at 2.49 percent.

Can you REALLY cut credit card debt?

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Can you REALLY cut credit card debt?
By James Coney

Borrowers are being told they can write-off their credit card debts and have the interest repaid because of a loophole in the law.

It is the latest move by claims-handling firms who have already cashed in on endowment mis-selling and bank charges disputes.

Those who pursue such claims are being asked to pay fees upfront and could lose almost a third of any settlement to the firm handling the claim.

One firm advertising on local radio is Cartel Client Review, based in Manchester.

It claims: ‘Credit card companies have reduced thousands of credit cards and written off millions of pounds worth of debt and you could benefit from this.

‘If you took your credit card out before April 2007 your outstanding balance could be completely written off.

‘Cartel Client Review can check all of your credit cards to see if you can claim to have your credit card balance completely cleared.’

Precisely how it does this is vague, even from the explanations on its website.

And when Money Mail called Cartel Client Review it refused to explain what the exact legal case was for their claims on the grounds that it did not wish to give anything away to competitors.

Legal experts contacted by Money Mail are unaware of any specific flaws in the Consumer Credit Act.

The only loophole they suggested was a change to the rules covering borrowers who were being treated unfairly and entitled for their debt to be cancelled, and interest and charges repaid.

Borrowers now have to prove their deal was based on an ‘unfair relationship’ rather than it was ‘extortionate’.

This means a county court judge has to decide only whether the terms and conditions of a loan agreement are unfair to the borrower.

Ingrid Gubbay, a lawyer with London firm Cohen Milstein Hausfeld & Toll, says: ‘What these firms are banking on is a loophole.

‘But these loopholes are still very difficult to prove in a county court and there is nothing that these firms are doing that can’t be done for free.’

However, Cartel Client Review disputes this.

Spokesman Carl Wright says: ‘It’s as near as impossible as you are ever going to get to be able to do this on your own. I don’t believe you could do this for free, when you have poured through the amount of different rules and litigation that we have gone through.’

He said that Cartel Client Review had been pursuing credit card balance reclaims since April and that the few cases it had taken on were successful.

On average, customers had reclaimed £3,000 to £5,000 per card.

Mr Wright claims that the old Consumer Credit Act, which was replaced in 2007, had flaws that meant contracts issued by credit card companies were not watertight.

‘This means that there are a number of cases where customers are entitled to redress,’ he says.

Under normal circumstances, money that you win back from a bank or credit card company is redress  -  it is supposed to put you back in the same position you would have been in had you not suffered a hardship.

But use a claims-handling firm and you will lose a large proportion of any redress to which you are entitled.

Cartel Client Review charges £495 to investigate a case, but it says you will get this back if it decides it cannot win your argument. You will also pay a £11 document review fee.

This will be for a request under the Data Protection Act so that it can get details of all your statements and correspondence with the credit card company.

However, if the case is successful you will then pay 30 pc of the interest repaid to you, payments that are returned and balance cleared.

Under the Banking Code, which most credit card companies have signed up to, firms must treat customers with financial difficulties sympathetically.

They should put you in touch with debt advice groups and help you come up with a repayment plan.

If you have been treated unfairly by a credit card firm you can turn to the free Financial Ombudsman Service.

It cannot make a decision as to whether a credit agreement is enforceable, but it can investigate a case where there are specific concerns about the way a customer has been treated.

Unlike these claims-handling firms, any money you get back is all yours, and you can also be awarded compensation where you have suffered a financial loss.

Discovering Methods for Paying Off Your Credit Card Debt

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Discovering Methods for Paying Off Your Credit Card Debt
by William Blake

Running up credit card debt is easy is the attempt to pay off credit card debt that is difficult. The quest to pay off credit card debt is the same as trying to lose weight, it is so easy to gain all the excess and it can be gained in a very short period of time but losing the excess can take years of hard effort.

Just like with gaining weight people do not necessarily mean to rack up large credit card debt it usually happens through years and years of unhealthy living that finally catches up with you and just like obesity serious credit card debt will eventually catch up to you.

The difference is that credit card debt will catch up to you a lot faster and leave you feeling a lot worse when the full effects are known. There is no surgery you can get to pay off credit card debt like there is to lose weight so you need to pay off credit card debt yourself and there are things you can do to help the process along.

The all important first step in the process is to stop using the credit cards at all. The cycle that many people fall into, where they can’t afford more than their minimum monthly payment but need to charge more in order to pay for necessities of life like food and gas and then the credit card company supposedly saves them by raising their credit limit, is a difficult trap to get out of. You must stop using the credit cards to pay for things if you want your financial situation to change for the better.

Pay for everything in cash, and only cash. The following suggestions will help you when you find that you have run out of cash but still need to pay for monthly bills and other important things.

It Will Take Hard Work

Unfortunately the way to pay off credit card debt is through hard work and sacrifice and that means a few things. First of all you need more money coming in and if that means taking on overtime at work, or even getting a second job, then that is what you have to do. This is not going to be easy and it will seem hard at times but if you do it right then there can be a light at the end of the tunnel and you will work very hard knowing there is a destination instead of that heavy feeling you get when two full time jobs become your necessary lifestyle every month.

A well established plan that outlines how you will use your extra earnings to get rid of your debt will help you persist until you are successful.

About the Author:
Are you looking for ideas for reducing credit card debt? Learn some simple ways to start getting your debt paid off today on the Debtopedia website. Visit http://www.debtopedia.com to get your free copy of my special report “Secrets Of Credit Card Debt”.

How To Get Non-Profit Credit Card Debt Consolidation Help

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How To Get Non-Profit Credit Card Debt Consolidation Help
by William Blake

A large number of individuals spend a vast number of years trying to keep their credit card debt under control, only to lose the delicate balance and see everything come crashing down around them.

The first inclination is to run to the credit card debt management companies you see on television and ask them to help you put the house of cards back together so you can go on with your spending habits until the cards crash again and that is exactly what a regular credit card management company will do. They will help you get out of trouble temporarily and then watch you get right back into trouble again so they can swoop in and save you while adding to the money they already make from you on a monthly basis.

Instead of calling the first service that advertises their assistance on TV, why not get out your phone book and look up the number of a non-profit credit card debt consolidation organization. That way, you can get the help you actually need.

Non-profit credit card debt consolidation services analyze your situation honestly, letting you know exactly what their debt elimination plan will cost you in the long run. That includes the monthly fee that they will charge you for their assistance in the whole process.

Credit card debt management companies charge a service fee too. But they try their best to conceal the amount of that payment from you. Non-profit credit card debt consolidation organizations are not interested in just getting you out of the debt you currently find yourself in. They will no doubt ask you extensive questions regarding your spending habits to help you get your life better organized financially. You will be completely involved in the debt elimination process.

The Catch

If you are a qualified debt consolidation manager which organization would you work for? You would probably work for the one that pays the most, right? A non profit credit card debt consolidation organization can have a difficult time attracting good talent because they do not pay well and in the financial services industry, as you can imagine, money means everything.

If, while receiving assistance from a non-profit debt consolidation service, you feel uncomfortable with your debt manager who is working with you, you can decide to get assistance from another service. Make sure that you ask lots of questions and that you understand exactly what will be done in an effort to fix your finances.

About the Author:
Never able to pay off credit card bill at the end of the month? Find out how to get your debt paid off faster - starting right now - on the Debtopedia website. Visit http://www.debtopedia.com to claim your free copy of my special report “Secrets of Credit Card Debt” now.

The Honest Facts Regarding Credit Card Debt

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The Honest Facts Regarding Credit Card Debt
by William Blake

Opinions regarding financial matters can be helpful, but knowing the honest facts is infinitely more beneficial. Getting the facts regarding credit card debt is not always the easiest thing to do, but doing so will definitely help you to handle your monthly payments and communicate better with the credit card companies you have borrowed money from.

If you are armed with credit card debt facts then you can better lay out a plan for paying off that debt and maybe a little insight into credit card debt facts can help you eliminate your debt completely.

Minimum Payments Are Not Enough

In general, making the minimum monthly payment on you credit cards that the credit card company requires is not enough to effectively eliminate your credit card debt fast, since your minimum monthly payment mostly pays off the interest that is being charged to your account; it only affects the principal in a very slight way. The fact is that the credit card company would rather raise your limit and let you keep on the minimum monthly payment on a progressively larger and larger principal.

The credit card companies are in it for interest and service charge payments and as long as you are making those then you will always be a hit with the credit card companies. Just paying $10 a month more to your minimum payment will speed up the pay off process but what will really help is not using the card at all.

Interest Rates: Up for Negotiation

A lot of people do not realize this and a lot of people do not keep track of their interest payments every month either. Look at the interest rate on your next credit card bill and just see what it is. If you started a couple of years ago with a great rate from some bank at around 12% then chances are by now it is up and around 20%.

The fact is that the credit card company does not have to inform you of a change in your interest rate. If you notice that your interest rate has gone up, call the credit card company and threaten to pay off the entire balance that you owe and switch to another company if they do not reduce your interest rates immediately. The results can be surprisingly beneficial.

About the Author:
Do you know how credit card reduction services can affect your credit score? There are some things you need to know before you use these services. Get the inside scoop on what you need to know on the Debt Smackdown website

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