Tag: debt

Time for a Review

What’s more common in business could/ought to apply to us.

I was very pleased to call by and have a chat with a very good friend and his wife recently because they are facing financial difficulties.

Slightly unusual in that he is a qualified Doctor and has a share in the practice and his wife is a music teacher. Why should they have problems?

They bought their house three years ago and, like so many others, took out a large mortgage.  Probably not the best deal available at the time but it allowed them to secure the house they wanted. Since they purchased the property, house prices have fallen so they have fallen straight into negative equity!

The house needed some work and they also carried out a loft conversion. To make this possible they arranged another loan, not at a very good rate, but at least they are working on the property, and the bits they have done look great.

Working hours and the need to keep up to date with patient notes and write appraisals means that there is almost no time for relaxation; to fall into bed at night is a welcome relief! But what of the financial situation?

To keep the show on the road there has been no time to review the arrangement of ‘bricks’ on which the financial blocks are built.  Now they facing a large tax bill, so another large loan is being proposed, just to keep the tax man quiet and keep the show on the road.

How many of us find ourselves in a similar situation? Yet industry has a business practice that can help us. Analyse, diagnose, correct – sort of based on the mantra that ‘You can’t manage what you can’t measure‘.

  • Review our situation and diagnose the problems.
  • Look at our options.
  • Decide what to do.
  • Action our decision
  • And lastly REVIEW progress.

How often are we likely to review our situation like this at home or even make basic changes.  Well perhaps we need to review more often than we think. Make it a regular weekly practice.

Look at being tax efficient, and in the case I am describing this was the major problem, so the cycle of worry is now being broken, and a new firm financial arrangement of blocks being put in place rather than the little boxes, which were piled high, and about to fall down.

Yes it takes time. No we don’t want to face it, but hey its like banging your head against a wall.

It is great when it stops.

Try it!

Bob Derham

Economics and Semantics

Governments borrow – why?

This post is a plea for help from someone clever …. what I would like to understand concerns “the borrowing requirement”. All my adult life I have listened year after year to the British Chancellor’s presentation of his budget and each time there is reference to “the borrowing requirement”.

What I would like to know is WHY there is a borrowing “requirement” in the first place. Exactly WHY do governments spend more than they “earn”? And more to the point, why do – and can – they keep doing this year after year, decade after decade? Layman that I am, it seems to me that continually borrowing, living beyond one’s means, spending more than one receives is BOUND to lead to problems in the long run. Is it simply that in most western democracies the “long run” is not foremost in the minds of our leaders? Or does this continual borrowing not matter?

I was interested in the last French presidential election to see that  centrist candidate François Bayrou proposed making it illegal for the government to spend more than it received. I found this courageous and innovative. Naturally,

Bayrou

he came nowhere in the election! Silly chap! He should have promised to spend, spend, spend like the rest of them! Then he may have had a chance.

No, we are paying vast amounts of interest every year merely to service our debt. The basic questions are: Why can and do states do this? Is it necessary and is it wise? And if the answer to the last two questions is “No”, then why do we let them get away with it?

It seems to me that the “borrowing requirement” is simply a fairly crude means that governments use to bribe us with our own money. Please correct me if I am wrong!

By Chris Snuggs