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| Credit Report and Repair

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Pack away
debt stress free

Want to know what the big
moneymaker is for credit card companies? Fees (read: your money). Last year,
31 percent of the industry's profits came in the form of late-payment fees,
over-limit fees and the like.
If you are like the average American family, your total credit card debt is
around $8,100. If you were to stop charging altogether and pay only the
minimum amount due on this amount, it would take about 30 years to get rid
of it.
No one wants to hand over cash to the credit card companies, but by paying
only the minimums or falling behind a couple of months here and there, you
are lining their pockets with profit and limiting your opportunities for
enjoying life.
Use the "Payment push plan" to methodically dissolve your debts. Here's how
it works.

1. No new debt
Put away the credit cards; borrowing is no longer an option. Even when you
know you deserve something, you can't have it until you can afford to pay
cash for it.
2. It's a head game
A daily affirmation helps to program your mind for success; post this on
your bathroom mirror: "By living frugally, we will have the cash necessary
to pay off our debts in ___ months instead of ___. The $______ we save in
interest will be put into savings so we will always have enough to pay the
rent and weather any lean periods in the future."
3. Prepare a debt repayment schedule
Use our debt repayment worksheet. Include columns for the name of the debt,
balance due, interest rate, current payment and "Payment Push" period.
Rank the debts by interest rate, with the highest one on top. Add a line
under each debt to describe how you're going to fund the "Payment Push."
The "Payment Push" gets applied to one debt at a time: Continue to make the
same monthly payments on all debts except the one getting the "Payment
Push."
4. Start at the top
Apply the "Payment Push" strategy to the debt on the top of the list: All
extra, available cash is used to pay down the debt with the highest interest
rate, first. That includes raises, bonuses, belt-tightening and that $20
bill that unexpectedly popped up.
Push hard at the rest of them. When the first debt is paid off, use the cash
that is freed up to pay down the next debt on the list.
Be on the lookout for new ways to cut costs and bring in more money. The
sooner a debt gets paid off, the sooner you can push hard at the next one on
the list.
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