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Credit Scores, Credit Cards: How Consumer Finance Works: How to Avoid Mistakes and How to Manage Your Accounts Well | 
enlarge | Author: The Silver Lake Editors Creator: The Silver Lake Publisher: Silver Lake Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $11.95 Buy New: $0.01 You Save: $11.94 (100%)
New (3) Used (8) from $0.01
Rating: 2 reviews
Media: Paperback Pages: 288 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 4.6 x 0.8
ISBN: 1563437821 Dewey Decimal Number: 371 EAN: 9781563437823
Publication Date: February 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description How to make sure your credit history, financial data, account information and other essentials are strong and safe! In 2001, the average North American consumer spent nearly $40,000 on credit cards. By 2005, this average person will carry over $50,000 in consumer debt - not counting mortgages or car loans! This unsecured consumer debt is fundamentally changing the way Americans live: * the tradition of a home owned free and clear has become unusual as people borrow against their homes and refinance repeatedly to pay for discretionary spending * financing vacations, electronics and dining out with multiple credit cards is commonplace At the same time, credit scores have become the golden keys to successful borrowing. But what does it all mean? How do you know youre managing your credit wisely? In a credit-based economy, your credit score means as much to you as money in the bank meant to your grandparents --and here's how to protect it!
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| Customer Reviews: Shows how credit works in plain English July 23, 2008 Paul Lappen (Manchester, CT USA) It's no great revelation to say that America has become a credit economy. Credit can bring an upper-class lifestyle to the middle class, and it can be the instrument of a person's financial downfall.
There are many ways to measure a person's financial condition, but the benchmark is a FICO (Fair, Isaac and Co.) score. Those with a higher score can expect lower interest rates. However, those with a lower FICO score should plan on much higher interest rates, leading to higher bills each month, making their financial hole deeper and deeper. It will take months, even years, of diligent effort to raise your FICO score, but it is possible, and a really good idea.
Get rid of all but one or two cards. After you pay off one card, cancel it and destroy it. Read your credit card bill, not just the amount owed. Call your credit card issuer, and ask about a payment plan or lower interest rate. Get a free copy of your credit report from one of the major credit agencies, and read it. If there are any errors on the report (there is a good chance that there are errors), start writing and calling the appropriate persons. Document everything, and expect it to take lots of time.
For those with bad money problems, start with two simple steps. Make a budget and stick with it, and pay down your debts (even a small payment is better than no payment). Be very wary of the companies that promise to get you out of debt trouble; they may just make your problems worse.
The information in this book may seem like common knowledge, but considering the skyrocketing level of credit card debt, and the rising numbers of people living off their credit cards, it certainly bears repeating. This book does a fine job of showing, in plain English, just how credit works.
Credit Scores, Credit Cards: How Consumer Finance Works: How to Avoid Mistakes and How to Manage Your Accounts Well September 27, 2005 Rolando R. Cedillo 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
Great book for any one who wants to know how credit card companies operate.
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