Archive for the ‘The Economy’ Category

Bring Back the Home Owners Loan Corp

Friday, March 20th, 2009

HOLC or Home Owners Loan Corporation was an agency formed as a viable alternative to foreclosure.

The Home Owners Loan Corporation essentially bought mortgages from failed banks during the Great Depression of the 1930s and modified the loan terms to much more reachable ones. They offered easier refinance options to homeowners than the remaining banks, afraid to take on mortgages. It extended the loan repayment period and divided the single lump sum payments into much smaller installments.

Result? The Home Owners Loan Corporation assisted more than one million American families in repaying their mortgage debt and to avoid foreclosure.

Contact your representatives and legislators and ask them about reviving the Home Owners Loan Corporation.

Why Our Government is On the Wrong Economic Recovery Path

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

It was there all along, waiting on the horizon years ago. I’m talking of course of the housing bust. I casually mentioned the artificially inflated housing problem to a group of friends in the Summer of 2005, and how the housing boom was going to adjust in the coming years and come back and haunt us. What I didn’t foresee was how hard and how far it was going to spread.

What I still see as a problem that no one is talking about is the 0% interest financing that has to come to an end. Automotive manufacturers make their dividends, the real bulk of any profits in the financing arm, not from the manufacturing. Auto makers have been giving away their product for years, all while biting their own tails.

Two, low and non-existent interest on passbook savings accounts does no one any good. Savings accounts should not be necessarily tied to the current federal lending rates. Savings accounts should be used to insulate both the banks and the consumers by encouraging healthy saving habits.

Three, spending the bulk of the stimulus monies on programs simply results in budget crises down the road. “Projects, have a begin and end date, programs usually don’t”. I guarantee that in 2-3 years we will be at one of those periods when the U.S. Senate can’t pass a budget because of party bickering and forces our government to a temporary standstill.

How To Up Your Funds In a Down Economy

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

How do you make money in a recession? Moreover, how do you make money in a recession when you live at or near a paycheck to paycheck existence?

For many Americans, myself included, paying the utilities, the insurance, the mortgage or rent becomes nearly an impossible act of juggling from one week to the next, and one pay check to the next. But you do it, you continue to pay your bills in good faith.

The only way to make money in a recession, is to not spend it in the first place. My dear Uncle John taught me it’s not what you earn that makes you rich, it’s what you don’t spend.

That’s not to say you don’t invest, invest in a Roth IRA, forget a standard old IRA, invest in building an emergency fund if you don’t already have one. Most recommend 6-8 months, I suggest 12-15 months if you can swing it.

Back to the whole “how when there’s nothing left of the paycheck”? You can look at it one of two ways, pay yourself first, YOU are a bill that’s due each month, week whatever. OR, each time you make an impulse purchase try your darnedest to say, you know I don’t need that bag of chips, I’ll wait till they’re on sale. Whatever you can do to pinch a penny here and there. Change is also a great starter tool, the average couple can save and extra $100 a month or more just by gathering up their coin change each night.

A $20 spot here and there slipped into savings develops in to an almost incurable habit of setting money aside. Start small, dream big.

The Fear

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

As the economy worsens, so does the fear. The scrutiny of each purchase, the fight with your husband because he bought Gain Detergent instead of the more economical Sun Brand Detergent as you had asked.

Of course you should think about each purchase, but it seems ridiculous to some to have to make such decisions over a choice of soap. It’s not, and never has been. Watching and being aware of what your everyday purchases really cost goes along way towards reaching your financial goals.

Typically buying in bulk, when on sale and with proper storage space can result in net savings that can pay off debt, save for the future or simply build wealth.

As the economy worsens, which it will in the near future anyway, tighten that belt, limit eating out to once or at the most 4-5 times per month and you will see an immediate increase to your available cash flow.



Home |

Copyright © 2009 Blue Bayou, LLC. PO Box 25055. Salt Lake City, Utah 84125