- Moin, moin!"Bankruptcy Filings Rise, Putting U.S. on Record Pace" - marsch, 25.08.2001, 11:25
- Re:"That´s just a shocking number!" owT - JüKü, 25.08.2001, 13:01
- Na gut, Du hast zitiert.:-) oT. - BossCube, 25.08.2001, 16:43
- Fonds im Goldrausch, Link zu WamS-Artikel (owT) - Harry-2, 25.08.2001, 20:28
- Na gut, Du hast zitiert.:-) oT. - BossCube, 25.08.2001, 16:43
- Re:"That´s just a shocking number!" owT - JüKü, 25.08.2001, 13:01
Na gut, Du hast zitiert.:-) oT.
>>08/24 17:20
>> Bankruptcy Filings Rise, Putting U.S. on Record Pace (Update1)
>> By Bob Gravely
>> Washington, Aug. 24 (Bloomberg) -- The number of Americans declaring bankruptcy rose almost 25
>> percent between April and June compared with the same period a year ago, putting 2001 on track
>> to break a record of 1.4 million bankruptcy filings set in 1998.
>> ``That's just a shocking number,'' said Sam Gerdano, executive director of the American Bankruptcy
>> Institute, a non- partisan research institution. ``There's never been a first six months like we've had
>> this year.''
>> More than 400,000 Americans declared bankruptcy between April and June, a 24.5 percent
>> increase from the same quarter last year, according the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts.
>> Filings increased during the first three months of this year by 18 percent over the first quarter of last
>> year.
>> Gerdano's group calculates that the 767,235 new cases during the first six months of this year
>> surpasses the number of cases during the first half of 1998 by 5.4 percent.
>> Gerdano attributed the rise to a sluggish U.S. economy and a desire by some consumers to declare
>> bankruptcy before Congress clears legislation making it harder to discharge credit card debt.
>> Small Rise in Business Cases
>> Bankruptcy filings increased 8.6 percent to 1,386,606 during the 12-month period that ended in
>> June, according to the U.S Court's data, which was released today. Personal filings increased 8.8
>> percent to 1,349,471 during that period. Business filings increased 0.6 percent to 37,135.
>> Bankruptcy cases increased steadily from 284,517 in 1984 to 1.4 million in 1998. Filings decreased
>> slightly in 1999 and 2000.
>> Analysts say that recent job cuts by U.S. companies such as Ford Motor Co., have made more
>> Americans unable to pay credit card and other debts. There were 3.18 million Americans collecting
>> unemployment benefits during the week that ended Aug. 11, the highest number since 1992.
>> According to the Federal Reserve data, Americans devoted 14.4 percent of disposable personal
>> income to paying off debt in the first quarter of this year, the highest level in 14 years.
>> ``People have been laid off and had their incomes reduced, and some have been pushed over the
>> edge,'' said George Yacik, vice president of SMR Research Corp., a New Jersey-based consumer
>> finance research firm.
>> Yacik and Gerdano said the bankruptcy legislation pending in Congress is causing some of increase.
>> The House and Senate have passed bills that differ only at the margins, with a final version
>> expected later this year.
>> Tightening Chapter 7
>> The legislation is a top priority for MBNA Corp. and other credit card issuers and retailers. It would
>> prevent most debtors with incomes above the state median from filing for bankruptcy under Chapter
>> 7 of the code, which allows bankruptcy filers to escape unsecured debt after liquidating some assets.
>> Instead, more debtors would be forced into Chapter 13 bankruptcy, in which debtors are forced to
>> repay debts in part or in full over three to five years.
>> Consumer groups and other opponents of the bankruptcy bill say that making it harder for Americans
>> to absolve debts through bankruptcy will prevent many from getting back on their feet after job loss,
>> illness or other setbacks. The bill's supporters say too many well-to-do debtors abuse the system by
>> filing under Chapter 7.
>> During the 12-month period ending in June, there were 972,659 Chapter 7 filings and 403,418
>> Chapter 13 filings.
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