It was reported yesterday that one in seven households in Australia is on ‘struggle street’ – spending more than it earns. It seems many Australians are living on credit, including some of our richest. We look at the concept of living on credit, and how existing this way can not only put pressure on the household, but when it all catches up and you are lumbered with bad credit history – threaten the family’s ability to get the best credit at the best rates for years to come. We look at how you get there, why you want to avoid it, and what to do about it.

By Graham Doessel, Founder and CEO of MyCRA Credit Rating Repairs and www.fixmybadcredit.com.au.

News.com.au featured some interesting statistics put out by the ABS yesterday in its article ‘Aussie strugglers living beyond means’:

“One in seven Australian households is spending more than it earns, as the working poor struggle with monster mortgages and surging power bills.

Nearly 8 per cent of the nation’s richest households were living on credit, the Australian Bureau of Statistics reported yesterday.

Of the top 20 per cent of households earning the most money, 3 per cent could not afford to pay a gas, electricity or phone bill on time during 2009-10.

Of the poorest 20 per cent of households, one in five could not pay their bills on time and one in four spent more than they earned.”

Living this way is living dangerously. Often you are said to be robbing Peter to pay Paul. But if something goes wrong, you can run a real risk of getting into arrears. If your accounts fall 60 days behind, then your Creditor will place a default on your credit file – and this will impact you and your family for years and years to come. You will be banned from mainstream credit. The credit you do buy after that will be at a pretty high price. You may not even be able to get a mobile phone on a plan.

How did we get here?

Sure petrol prices are ridiculous, and grocery bills seemed to rise no end, and then there are reports out there that people have had to use bbq’s and eskies because they can’t pay their power bill – but the average person can afford these essentials. It’s the luxuries we have issues with – and what we consider to be luxuries and essentials today may have something to do with it.

A while back, I blogged about the concept of “Affluenza” an idea put out there by Australians Clive Hamilton and Richard Denniss’ in their book, Affluenza: When Too Much is Never Enough.

Affluenza is a disease of the 21st Century that can make us sick, and it can make our credit file sick with it –pulling us into a crazy cycle of spending and debt. Many of us are struggling to stay happy under a pile of ‘things’ and a pile of debt.

It is the disease of consumerism and it is being fuelled by big corporations urging us to buy more, persuading us with clever advertising aimed at selling to our emotions. It drives us to work crazy hours leaving no time for ourselves and our families. It drives up the mental health problems, the suicide rates, the divorce rates, the drug addictions, fraud, the stress related health problems – all these things seem to be a curse of living in the 21st Century in the Western world.

Here is an excerpt from that book:

“Our houses are bigger than ever, but our families are smaller. Our kids go to the best schools we can afford, but we hardly see them. We’ve got more money to spend, yet we’re further in debt than ever before. What is going on?

The Western world is in the grip of a consumption binge that is unique in human history. We aspire to the lifestyles of the rich and famous at the cost of family, friends and personal fulfilment. Rates of stress, depression and obesity are up as we wrestle with the emptiness and endless disappointments of the consumer life.

When I read yesterday that one in seven of us are still living on borrowed money, it makes me realise that not enough Australians understand the power of credit. It is a great concept, but as long as we make it work for us. We should use it to enhance our lives so that we can spend time with the ones we love, or to really improve our quality of life. Not make ourselves slaves to it.

Maybe we throw that long sought after holiday on the credit card and take the family away? Or take out repayments on an educational course that will change our working lives forever? Or perhaps we do buy a home, but after years of good saving. One that fits all the requirements of what we need, rather than what we want. A home we don’t have to work 24/7 to pay off because it is priced within our means.

What we shouldn’t do is spend money we don’t have, on things we don’t need, and ultimately find ourselves with what we don’t want – debt, unhappiness and a bad credit history.

What does your credit file say about you?

We should think of our credit file as a mirror on our finances. It can reflect our assets, our good history, but it can also reveal our financial shortcomings. It can be a reflection of our inability to stick with something, our disregard for repayments and it shows the financial potholes we fall into that are sometimes impossible to climb out of.

A bad credit rating can completely change our financial situation. The black marks placed there by creditors show up on our credit file for 5 years. Bad credit can limit our choices and can perpetuate the debt cycle by leading us to choose loans with higher interest rates and more fees, so the struggle to make repayments can be even harder.

If we want to try and start again with credit, it may be possible to wipe the slate clean, particularly if our bad credit rating should not be there.  Firstly, we can obtain a free copy of our credit report from one or more of the credit reporting agencies, Veda Advantage, Dun & Bradstreet and Tasmanian Collection Services (TASCOL). If after checking our credit file we find inconsistencies, we may be a good candidate for credit repair.

A credit repairer can work with creditors on our behalf to completely clear our credit file of all defaults, clear-outs, writs and Judgments which contain errors, are unjust or just should not be there. This means we no longer have a bad credit rating, but a completely clear credit file, giving us the financial freedom to use credit whenever we need to.

The rest is up to us.

Contact a credit repair advisor on 1300 667 218 for more information on repairing bad credit, or visit our main site www.mycra.com.au.

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