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Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Personal Signature Loans and The Art of Borrowing

By Mark Lundersenn

Many of the problems in the world financial system right now are due to the widespread misuse of credit. It all really comes down to the Art of Borrowing, and as a nation (and world) we've been going about it all the wrong way. We're borrowing way too much relative to our income; we're saving less than 0% of our earnings, and we're headed down the path to financial destruction.

Residential real estate, and all the abuses on the both sides of the transactions, is the most glaring indicator of how ridiculous our country has chosen to behave itself with respect to credit and lending practices. A plumber earning $54,000 per year has no business borrowing $400,000 to buy a home; he'll never be able to to keep up with the payments. And now the taxpayers of the world, most of all those who have kept their mortgage current by not borrowing more than they could pay back, are footing the bill.

We have to do better next time, and doing better means using credit intelligently. Most of the time borrowing wisely means not borrowing at all, including avoiding personal signature loans and other quick cash borrowing tools. Stay away from them no matter what - even if it means taking a part time job to get by in the meantime.

I'm taking a strong stance on this issue because short term cash loans could put you in a hole from which you might never remove yourself. Their repayment terms and interest rates are usurious to say the least. Could any intelligent person really pay 100% and hundreds of dollars in fees on a loan designed to help them survive the month?

It's really never a SMART move, but there may be circumstances in your life when it becomes absolutely necessary to borrow money this way. For example, let's say that one morning you pull into your parking space at the office and you accidently dent your boss's car. And he fires you.

Sure that would be completely unfair, and you'd probably even be justified in taking legal action against him, but it would be of no use. And besides - you're unemployed now - you don't have any money to pay attorneys do you?

The only remaining option may be to bite the bullet and head to your local bank or loan store. After all, your mortgage company isn't going to let you skip payments just because you have a crazy boss; they have big time cash problems of their own.

The only sound advice I can offer you is to only take from the bank the minimum necessary funds to keep your bills current until you get a new job and get back on your feet. And Don't be choosy when it's time to find that job. In these crazy times, we'd all be wise to take whatever employment presents itself to us.

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