How to Avoid Bankruptcy and Clear Your
Debts
BY:
Michael Curry,
In 2005, over 20,000 people in the UK avoided
bankruptcy and succeeded in clearing their
debts. This article discusses how they were
able to do so and why the 15,389 people who
filed for bankruptcy at the beginning of this
year should have checked out the alternatives
first.
In 1986, the government introduced a scheme
called an Individual Voluntary
Arrangement, or IVA for short. IVAs were
designed to give people a legitimate
alternative to bankruptcy.
The government understood that although
bankruptcy had numerous disadvantages attached
to it, for many debtors it seemed to be the
only option. It therefore set up IVAs to give
people a way to both avoid bankruptcy and clear
their debts.
An IVA is a
formal and private arrangement between a
debtor and his/her creditors. As a result,
there is no stigma attached to an IVA in the
way there is with bankruptcy because no-one
else needs to know about it.
If an IVA is agreed, interest on the debts
frozen. This is very different to a debt
management plan which many people set up as a
way of trying to avoid bankruptcy. With a debt
management plan, interest can continue to
accrue on your debts even when the plan is in
place.
An IVA allows debtors to pay off their debts
via affordable monthly repayments over a five
year period. These can be as low as £200 a
month. Moreover, it is usual for a certain
amount of your debt to be written off
altogether with an IVA.
After the five years have expired and providing
that you have adhered to the terms of your IVA,
you are declared debt free.
An IVA offers a very good way to avoid
bankruptcy and its negative repercussions. Once
an IVA has been set up, your creditors are not
allowed to contact you and interest on your
debts is frozen.
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