- Articles about debt help: Introduction
- Articles about debt help: Immunity to debt
- Articles about debt help: Home prices and feeling immune to debt
- Articles about debt help: Is there a solution to our immunity to the dangers of debt?
- Articles about debt help: What should you do if you are not immune to your debt load?
Articles about debt help: Introduction
I regularly write articles about debt help. Trends over the past few years about the increase in Canadian average household debt has gotten me thinking. We can get vaccinated for measles, mumps, rubella, influenza and a host of other diseases. Now it seems that without even getting a shot, Canadians have developed immunity to the dangers of debt.
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How could this happen to what was traditionally a nation of savers? Did we just throw caution to the wind? Why did we stop heeding the warnings from the Bank of Canada, financial institutions, the Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) and the credit reporting agencies?
Articles about debt help: Immunity to debt
Everyday there are headlines about the alarming levels of personal debt and how many Canadians are teetering on the brink of financial disaster. Have we stopped hearing the message or heeding the warnings? It seems that as we borrow more and take on more debt that our attitude to debt changes.
“People who don’t have any debts tend to be strongly opposed to debt… but if you put them into a situation where they are forced to acquire it, their attitudes change in the direction of toleration,” said Stephen Lea, an emeritus professor of psychology at the University of Exeter in the U.K. who has decades of experience studying the psychology of debt. As people acquire debt, Lea has found they also change their attitudes towards indebtedness. That’s an example of what psychologists call dissonance reduction. According to Mr. Lea, we really have developed immunity to debt.
Articles about debt help: Home prices and feeling immune to debt
There are more reasons why Canadians seem to feel immune to the dangers of debt. With house prices skyrocketing, home owners feel rich. And it seems that if Canadians are working and making their payments promptly, they feel in control of their finances. If interest rates continue to stay low, Canadians will continue to borrow more and more without realizing the dangers of accumulating debt.
Articles about debt help: Is there a solution to our immunity to the dangers of debt?
Saul Schwartz, who has studied personal debt as a professor of public policy at Carleton University believes that government should focus on policy actions that would rein in the lenders who are enabling all our borrowing because all the warnings are being ignored. I don’t know if that’s the answer but as a professional licensed insolvency trustee I can tell you that many Canadians felt immune to the dangers of debt until they faced a financial crisis.
Articles about debt help: What should you do if you are not immune to your debt load?
Take action before you find yourself in the throes of a financial crisis. Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. has helped many Canadian companies and people throughout the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) facing financial crisis or bankruptcy that need a plan for Starting Over, Starting Now. Don’t delay. Give us a call today. Financial problems can be solved with immediate action and the right plan.