by gadj1976 » Sun Aug 10, 2008 10:51 am
by Mickyj » Sun Aug 10, 2008 10:58 am
by Psyber » Sun Aug 10, 2008 11:16 am
by Mickyj » Sun Aug 10, 2008 11:52 am
Psyber wrote:Yes, consumer affairs are the place to report them, and possibly the Privacy Commissioner - or whatever the title is.
I have mixed feelings about pursuing debtors. On the one hand you feel for those who are genuinely struggling, but on the other hand there are those who run up debt, knowing they have no capacity or intention to pay, and are deliberately stealing your time when they contract for services.
Harrassing neighbours is a bit over the top though. Perhaps you should send them an account for "Consultancy Fees", followed up with a notice from your debt collector!
by Psyber » Sun Aug 10, 2008 12:31 pm
Mickyj wrote: I have mixed feelings re people who run up "debts".As a long time employed person who has never earned huge amounts of money .This job 14 years last job 13 years.
I find it very funny or hard to believe certain people that get granted credit .In my case I was lucky enough to get a low interest home loan back 20 years ago.Then the bank manager laughed when I went in for a normal home loan.Never the less he gave me the low interest loan (almost paid off now) but left me with the statement until you pay off this loan you will never get another loan .And he in fact was and is correct.When we as a family needed to buy something ie a CAR to get me to work (public transport is a joke)to pay my bills I was knocked back.Even trying to get a PC many years ago as a rent to buy from a big computer shop was a big fat "NO".
All this has lead my wife and I to pay cash for every thing .We can not get credit we save money up .Of course we have never tried Finance companies but family and friends have and I will not go that path.
So no credit rating but at least when we pay cash for products we get nice big fat DISCOUNTS as will happen shortly on a big purchase.![]()
I think myself lucky that I am a bad credit risk.Slow and Steady may be boring for some but it will win the day in the end .And what I own will always be mine and not a creditor!!
by Mickyj » Sun Aug 10, 2008 1:04 pm
Psyber wrote:Mickyj wrote: I have mixed feelings re people who run up "debts".As a long time employed person who has never earned huge amounts of money .This job 14 years last job 13 years.
I find it very funny or hard to believe certain people that get granted credit .In my case I was lucky enough to get a low interest home loan back 20 years ago.Then the bank manager laughed when I went in for a normal home loan.Never the less he gave me the low interest loan (almost paid off now) but left me with the statement until you pay off this loan you will never get another loan .And he in fact was and is correct.When we as a family needed to buy something ie a CAR to get me to work (public transport is a joke)to pay my bills I was knocked back.Even trying to get a PC many years ago as a rent to buy from a big computer shop was a big fat "NO".
All this has lead my wife and I to pay cash for every thing .We can not get credit we save money up .Of course we have never tried Finance companies but family and friends have and I will not go that path.
So no credit rating but at least when we pay cash for products we get nice big fat DISCOUNTS as will happen shortly on a big purchase.![]()
I think myself lucky that I am a bad credit risk.Slow and Steady may be boring for some but it will win the day in the end .And what I own will always be mine and not a creditor!!
Yes Micky you are right! My parents never went into debt and always paid cash or went without. My father bought his first car - a second hand Cortina - when he retired.
I've borrowed to invest, or for business, but only because I have been fortunate enough to have the income to support it. Ironically, because I can afford the loan the ANZ always give me an interest concession of 0.7% or so... The tragedy is often among those who can get credit and are offered more than they can carry, at increasingly high interest rates, until they are borrowing on credit cards at 20% plus. I really think lending institutions should be required by law to not lend amounts to people that they have no hope of paying for, and to wear the loss if they do so. That may restrain housing cost inflation, and other price inflation too. It seems a better option than allowing an open go then increasing interest rates and squeezing those who should never have been lent so much in the first place.
by Psyber » Sun Aug 10, 2008 3:17 pm
Much better than the other way around.Mickyj wrote: The wife calls us Asset rich Money poor
by Mickyj » Sun Aug 10, 2008 3:27 pm
Psyber wrote:Much better than the other way around.Mickyj wrote: The wife calls us Asset rich Money poor
Once people owe multi-thousands on credit cards at huge interest rates it is almost impossible to get back out from under short of destroying the credit cards and pouring everything into paying them off first.
All my income goes straight into a mortgage offset account, and I expect to be able to discharge my mortgage soon. Then I'll think about the two cars we own that are more than 12 years old - both have only 140K Km on the clock so are probable good for a while with some minor repairs I think. We got 13 years out of an early 1980s Range Rover, and it was only the English electricals that pensioned that off.
by Psyber » Sun Aug 10, 2008 3:34 pm
Good for you mate. I did a bit of process work as a student - packing Ash, calcium chloride, and [ugh] caustic soda crystals at ICI, Osborne.Mickyj wrote:Psyber wrote:Much better than the other way around.Mickyj wrote: The wife calls us Asset rich Money poor
Once people owe multi-thousands on credit cards at huge interest rates it is almost impossible to get back out from under short of destroying the credit cards and pouring everything into paying them off first.
All my income goes straight into a mortgage offset account, and I expect to be able to discharge my mortgage soon. Then I'll think about the two cars we own that are more than 12 years old - both have only 140K Km on the clock so are probable good for a while with some minor repairs I think. We got 13 years out of an early 1980s Range Rover, and it was only the English electricals that pensioned that off.
Your better than me Psyber I bought a brand new laser in 1981 I think .Owned it for 20 yrs then got a sigma now own a 96 falcon on gas .Lots more k's on the clock than yours but the LPG lasts me longer than Petrol did in the sigma.Go figure I was going through 40 bucks a week before petrol got over a dollar 20 .Now I just put in 20 bucks a week no worries .
Five more years and this Process worker will finally own this house
by Mickyj » Sun Aug 10, 2008 3:47 pm
Psyber wrote:Good for you mate. I did a bit of process work as a student - packing Ash, calcium chloride, and [ugh] caustic soda crystals at ICI, Osborne.Mickyj wrote:Psyber wrote:Much better than the other way around.Mickyj wrote: The wife calls us Asset rich Money poor
Once people owe multi-thousands on credit cards at huge interest rates it is almost impossible to get back out from under short of destroying the credit cards and pouring everything into paying them off first.
All my income goes straight into a mortgage offset account, and I expect to be able to discharge my mortgage soon. Then I'll think about the two cars we own that are more than 12 years old - both have only 140K Km on the clock so are probable good for a while with some minor repairs I think. We got 13 years out of an early 1980s Range Rover, and it was only the English electricals that pensioned that off.
Your better than me Psyber I bought a brand new laser in 1981 I think .Owned it for 20 yrs then got a sigma now own a 96 falcon on gas .Lots more k's on the clock than yours but the LPG lasts me longer than Petrol did in the sigma.Go figure I was going through 40 bucks a week before petrol got over a dollar 20 .Now I just put in 20 bucks a week no worries .
Five more years and this Process worker will finally own this house
After two weeks on the last and I was coughing blood so they moved me to hooking-on for the mobile crane.
Next year I took less money to be a Bus Conductor - it seemed a safer option!
by The Big Shrek » Sun Aug 10, 2008 4:12 pm
by smac » Sun Aug 10, 2008 7:50 pm
by gadj1976 » Mon Aug 11, 2008 8:25 am
by Psyber » Mon Aug 11, 2008 10:49 am
by mighty_tiger_79 » Mon Aug 11, 2008 2:05 pm
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