A new study suggests that distressed borrowers using a simpler bankruptcy process are succeeding — and that more people like them should try.

The process which enables this was introduced during the Biden administration.

  • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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    22 hours ago

    My sister moved to US from Poland when she was 18, about 25 years ago. She worked retail, banking and other random jobs. Got her degree online only couple of years ago. She has two kids, her husband died over 10 years ago so she was she was on her own for a long time now. She’s not complaining and is not planning on moving. Being Polish I know many people that moved to US with no education and did rather fine. My aunt and uncle won the green card lottery, moved to New Jersey ~30 years ago. He worked construction, she cleaned houses. They bought a big house, raised two kids. My other uncle worked construction there for 30 years until he retired and moved back to Poland. He was there illegally all this time and he was able to afford healthcare and is still alive while many of his peers in Poland died long time ago (5 uncles and aunts on both sides of my family died before 60). So… is it really as bad as you describe? How is it that immigrants with no degrees can find their way around, live comfortably, raise kids, go on holidays and so on but for Americans it’s all debt and/or suffering? I honestly don’t understand this.

    • daannii@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Husband?

      So a two income household.

      Banking ?

      Yeah that’s a corp job.

      “Worked construction and did house cleaning and bought a big house”.

      That’s not something most people with those two jobs could do. Even in a dual income household.

      Unless perhaps you failed to mention he owned a construction business.?

      Maybe 30 years ago. Sure. Not now.

      I think you are unaware of a few things that have changed.

      The cost of education has went up so much in 30 years.

      Even my associates degree I paid $13000 for in 2008-2012 is easily now a $25,000 degree. At a community college.

      As I said. Going to the next level , a state college, will be at minimum, $30k a year. (60k for associates, $120k for bachelor’s).

      Also , if you have kids or disabled, you are eligible for “free” money for college.

      I did not qualify for any free money.

      30 years ago , heck even 20 years ago, you could buy a house with only 8 or 9k down. And the house payments would be ~700 a month.

      That’s not how it is anymore.

      Those same Homes are half a million now.

      And the down payments needed are 30-50k.

      This is why boomers are very much out of touch with the reality of American life now.

      It’s not how it was in the 80s, or 90s.

      College is so expensive that when you graduate you owe so much, that the interest will rise faster than you can pay it off. Meaning you will just keep owing more money.

      Also as far as credentials. Every place that isn’t base like minimum wage jobs , requires a degree of some kind. With the exception of hard manual labor jobs. Like working in factories and warehouses. Hard labor. Hard on your body. And usually men work those jobs because of the physical demands being high. Destroying their bodies by 40.

      And also. I never could afford health insurance at any job I ever had until I got a job working for the health insurance company.

      There is no way anyone on minimum wage could possibly afford health insurance premiums.

      I recall working at Pizza Hut 2006 before I got my corp job. $6 an hour.

      After taxes I made about 700 a month.

      Insurance premium was $250. For a young healthy 20 year old.

      It’s way more than that now. ~$500-700 per month.

      And anyway. Doesn’t matter. Couldn’t afford deductable or copays. So pointless to have.

      • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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        9 hours ago

        Yeah, it all makes sense. I guess things really went downhill recently. My uncle and aunt didn’t own any business. They simply got a normal, fixed rate mortgage and bought 2 floor house. They lived at one floor and rented the other. That was 25-30 years ago but we’re talking two immigrants with no education. It’s crazy how much worse things are now.

        Still, my uncle lived there until 5 years ago when he retired. Worked construction, didn’t die at 40, had enough money to go to doctors, rent apartment and send money back home. I visited him twice for summer and worked with him (illegally, don’t tell anyone). It wasn’t hard work. I was a skinny teenager back then and was able to handle it. Lots of nailing and cutting but not that much carrying heavy things. I mean I wouldn’t trade places with him but again, we’re talking about immigrant with no education beyond primary school, not speaking English and staying in the country illegally. So yeah, I still can’t really wrap my head around just how much worse things have to be now. Or maybe immigrants are just build different? They look for different opportunities, have different support networks, expect different things…