Get Out Of Debt
I have lost my list of financial pointers, so I'm gonna have to wing it and probably only give out a couple of good pointers. I already gave the disclaimer that this was going to be a very short list of a few "common sense" items that
could help
some people.
Just like losing weight, where the only way it will happen is to consume less calories than you use, the only way out of debt is to make more money than you spend. Why is losing weight so hard? Because it's so much easier to just eat whatever sounds good. Why is is so hard to get rid of debt, because it's so easy to buy all the cool stuff you want. It is desireable to be grandiloquent.
Step #1 (the most important step):
Do not get any more debt. I could tell you about starving children in Africa or homeless folks everywhere to scare you with the "why would you buy an iPod if some people live in a cardboard box" argument, but I'll do even less. Do you
need to buy a car more than once every 10 years? Do you
need to even own a television? Do you
need to update your wardrobe every year? Is it just because everybody else goes into debt to get ahead now? The quote to apply here is "
Live like no one else now so you can live like no one else later."
To go along with that just remember that 60 years ago there
were no credit cards and department stores ADVISED AGAINST CREDIT/LOANS. Also, if you are, say, 23 years old, out of college and on your own now, then let me ask a question. Why would you try to have the same quality of life as your parents? It took them 50 years to get where they are! How can you expect to have all of that stuff NOW?
Anyway, step 2 is the
snowball method for debt elimination (idea from Dave Ramsey). You take all of your debts and order them by how much money you still owe on them. What you do is you pay the minimum amount on every debt except for the smallest of them. Pretty soon that small debt is payed off. You don't get a break in how much you pay now, instead you take that entire payment and "put another layer on the snowball" and make a higher payment on the next highest payment. If you are keeping to the plan and not taking on any more debt, then you can get on top of things after some consistency.
I do, however, have to admit that the snowball method is not mathematically consistent. The reason it works is because it gives periodic psychological micro-encouragement after each debt is eliminated. This helps a person to stay with the debt elimination plan.
However, if you are a "strong enough person" to stick with maximizing how much money you will throw at debt to eliminate it all, you will most effectively eliminate all of your debt by always making your maximum payments on the highest interest rate debts. I will follow with some examples:
Debt | Rate | Minimum | Payments Remaining | Total |
JC Penny | 7.90% | $17 | 13 | $117 |
Credit Card B | 5.90% | $120 | 60 | $6,000 |
Credit Card A | 19.80% | $160 | 64 | $8,000 |
Car | 8.50% | $400 | 30 | $9,000 |
Student Loans | 6.00% | $178 | 175 | $18,000 |
Mortgage | 8% | $1,100 | 342 | $148,000 |
The total minimum monthly payments are $1975. So, if you can spend $2000/month, and you start out by NOT buying your new outfit for $75, you will have JC Penney paid off after the first month. Now you can add what you used to pay to JC Penney to the next payment.
I will play devils advocate and show you what happens by paying the higher interest rates instead (using $400 applied to the two credit cards every month).
DEBT SNOWBALL PLAN: PAY THE LOWEST BALANCE FIRST
Card A: $8,000 at 19.8% at $160 per month Card B: $6,000 at 5.9% at $240 per month Total payments equal $400 per month
Card B is paid off in 26.74 months. At that point in time, Card A has a balance of $7,068 to which we start applying payments of $400.
Card A is paid off in another 21.06 months.
Total payoff time is 26.74+21.06=47.80 month
Total payoff cost=47.80 x $400=$19,120
That's $19,120 out-of-pocket cost for the Debt Snowball.
PAY THE HIGHEST INTEREST RATE FIRST
Card A: $8,000 at 19.8% at $280 per month Card B: $6,000 at 5.9% at $120 per month Total payments equal $400 per month
Card A is paid off in 38.96 months. At that point in time Card B has a balance of $2,124 to which we start applying payments of $400.
Card B is paid off in another 5.39 months.
Total payoff time is 38.96+5.39=44.35 months
Total payoff cost=44.35 x $400=$17,740
That's $17,740 out-of-pocket cost paying the highest interest card first.
CONCLUSION
"Debt Snowball" costs $19,120 "Pay highest rates first" costs $17,740
Additional cost for the Debt Snowball is $19,120-$17,740=$1,380 (because it takes over three months longer to repay the debt using this method).