The "Two Income" Trap
Overview:
Two children, two incomes, a home with a white picket fence; it's the quintessential American Dream. However, this American Dream has morphed into a survival regimen that many families simply cannot endure.
Parents are in worse economic shape than ever before. Married couples with children are twice as likely as childless couples to file bankruptcy. Having a child is the best indicator of whether someone will end up in financial collapse, according to the authors of recently published book, "The Two Income Trap," by Elizabeth Warren and Amelia Tyagi, a mother and daughter team (Harvard law professor and MBA) who did an extensive study on the nature of bankruptcy in America.
The authors maintain that the introduction of mothers into the workforce, rather than easing the financial strain of raising a family, sets their families up for financial disaster as the cost of raising children spirals out of control. More children will go through their parents' bankruptcy than their parents' divorce. One in seven middle-class families will file bankruptcy by 2010 . These figures are staggering for middle class families.
At first glance, that argument seems counterintuitive. Two incomes ought to create a larger financial cushion than a single income. The modern two-earner family brings in 75% more inflation-adjusted income than the traditional one-income family. Yet, families today have less discretionary income than the traditional one-income families for a variety of reasons.
The decline of public education has raised housing costs in good school districts, prompting parents to overextend on mortgages. Couples with children are spending more on housing than ever before. At the same time, the free-wheeling, unregulated lending industry resembles a carnival sideshow with lenders assuming the role of "carnival barkers;" step-right-up folks we'll finance 120% of the purchase price of that home for 3% down. Families are spending themselves into financial collapse. The lending has industry has buried American mailboxes in a tsunami of 5 billion pre-approved credit card offers in 2003.
This perilous situation is compounded by the fact that married couples with children work in an era of unprecedented job insecurity, where employers regularly slash salaries and insurance benefits. The rates of the medically uninsured are increasing, the cost of healthcare is through the roof and families are more likely to be caring for elderly parents. In fact, nearly 90% of families with children who file bankruptcy cite three reasons: job loss, medical problems, or divorce, according to the Harvard University Consumer Bankruptcy Project.
Having children is a leap of faith, rather than a cold, hard economic calculation. However, many families may not have the financial capacity to land safely on the other side.
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Some
Cold Hard Facts:
- In 2004, more women will file for bankruptcy than will graduate from college.
- In 2004, more children will live through their parents' bankruptcy than their parents' divorce.
- Seventy
percent (70%) of all Americans say they
are carrying so much debt that it is
making their home lives unhappy.
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So....What
Can You Do?
Here is a quick summary of the information and
advice contained in the book (with some
additional information and advice sprinkled
in). First...you need to get a handle on how
most people get into financial trouble.
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How
most people get into financial trouble:
-
They
have kids, and try to provide a safe
environment for them to grow up in where
they can also get a good education. This
usually means buying a house in the
suburbs, but suburban housing prices have
gone up so fast that families have to send
both parents to work in order to be able
to afford a good house. Even then, their
salaries are stretched thin.
-
Some
sort of crisis usually pushes a family
over the edge into debt. Medical
emergencies that result in large medical
bills or force one working parent to quit
and provide home care are a common
trigger. The layoff of one parent is
another common trigger. Divorce and the
increased cost it necessitates are a third
common reason for families to fall behind
on debt payments.
-
Rather
than shying away from families in
financial trouble, financial institutions
descend on them like vultures, offering
second mortgages and credit cards with
extremely high interest rates and late fee
schedules. The high interest rates and
excessive fees more than make up for high
collection costs and default rates. For
most big banks and retailers, high-risk
customers are their biggest source of
profits. Distressed families tend to
accept these offers as a short-term
solution for what often ends up becoming
long-term problems. Before they know it,
families end up buried under a mountain of
debt, and constantly dealing with
harassment from repo men and bill
collectors.
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A
summary of what people should do before they
get into trouble:
-
Consider
keeping one parent home. If the
working parent gets laid off both parents
can look for work. Keeping one parent at
home also saves on a wide range of costs
and the second salary is taxed much more
than the first.
-
Downsize
fixed costs. People who are
stretched thin during ordinary times are
just one unexpected crisis away from a
financial meltdown. Understanding that
medical emergencies, layoffs, divorces,
etc. happen, it is important to leave some
wiggle room after the fixed costs. In an
emergency it is much easier to cut back on
luxuries, so cutting back on housing, auto
and education expenses is a better way to
give your family an insurance buffer than
cutting back on the entertainment and
recreation budgets. Don't buy a house that
you can't afford. Just because a bank is
willing to loan you the money, doesn't
mean you can afford it. Many banks engage
in a practice of "loan to own"
whereby they offer sub-prime mortgages
they know will cause their customers great
pain. They collect huge profits on the
interest as long as the homeowner can
struggle to make the payments and then
make a bigger profit on the house once the
loan goes into default and the bank
forecloses. If you can't put 20% down you
probably shouldn't buy the house. If the
bank is only willing to offer a sub-prime
rate, don't take it.
-
Have
a backup plan in place. Know what
costs you can cut in advance and where you
will search for added income if a crisis
interrupts your current situation.
-
Put
some money aside in savings. Just
don't count on the stock and bond markets
or other real estate investments. Those
tend to go bad when the most people are
experiencing financial crisis.
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Want
more facts?
- More than 1.5 million American families declared bankruptcy last year.
- More than 18 million families would have been better off financially if they had declared bankruptcy, but out of a sense of responsibility, pride, stubbornness or ignorance continued to try and pay their bills.
- In bankruptcy the filing family gets to hang onto its home, but most other debts get wiped clean.
- Bankruptcy is still a major pain and an embarrassment with long lasting repercussions.
- An individual can't declare bankruptcy more than once in a 7 year period.
- The
biggest reason for the rise in debt
between 1980 and 2004 was the effective
elimination of usury laws that resulted
from a US Supreme Court decision in 1978.
Before then, states could effectively
limit predatory lending practices that
took advantage of distressed and
mathematically challenged consumers
(similar to the way heroine and crack
dealers take advantage of addicts). After
the decision, banks incorporated in South
Dakota and Delaware could charge very high
interest rates and they rushed to make
loans to people that pushed them into deep
levels of indebtedness that led to deep
reductions in their standard of living.
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Lastly,
advice for people already in DEEP financial
trouble:
-
Avoid
the blame game. Around 90% of
families get in trouble because something
bad happened to them. Financial stress can
lead to serious domestic problems, which
can lead to much more financial stress.
Sure, we all have responsibilities to our
creditors, but our responsibilities to our
children and families are a higher
priority.
-
Decide
which financial assets are most important
and pay for those first. The
house? The car? Health insurance when you
have an existing medical condition? Calls
from collectors will be extremely
annoying, but it is not cost effective for
creditors to actually reposes goods. If
you pay for too many of the
non-essentials, you may end up losing the
essentials.
-
Don't
get suckered into consolidating your debt.
Financial institutions will offer to let
you roll over your debts into second
mortgages. However, you need to have a
realistic eye on the possibility of
bankruptcy. Once you get out of
bankruptcy, you will have a much larger
and more expensive debt burden on the
house and will be more likely to lose it
if you consolidated those debts.
- Don't declare bankruptcy until the financial crisis is over. The collectors will harass you in every way imaginable, but eventually many of them will give up on collecting because that is the cheapest route for them. Meanwhile, most financial crisis will go on longer than the family expects. If you declare bankruptcy before it is over, you'll fall right back into debt without the ability to declare bankruptcy again for another7 years.
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