HOME  FORUM  MEDIA  EVENTS  ARTICLES  TV  BLOGS
•Home
Bankruptcy:
•Bankruptcy Information Center
•What is Bankruptcy?
•Is Bankruptcy right for me?

•How to declare Bankruptcy?
•What happens to my assets?
•Bankruptcy and credit rating

Forum:
•forum
•register
•search
•faq
•experts

Blogs:
•Bankruptcy News
•More...

Media Room:
•Press releases
•Media Coverage

Other:
•About BankruptcyHelp
•Links
•Contact us
•Debt Glossary
•Insolvency jobs


FORUM
  > Browse and post on our forum
Home   |   Profile   |   Register   |   Active Topics   |   Members   |   Search   |   FAQ

Welcome to our Forum, please register if you want to post
Ask a debt question
See the last 250 posts
Watch video on how to use forum
Username:
Password:

Save Password
Forgot your Password?

 All Forums
 Bankruptcy News
 bankruptcy news
 Debt collectors workload triples
 New Topic  Reply to Topic
 Printer Friendly
Author Previous Topic Topic Next Topic  

BankruptcyNews
Junior Member

358 Posts

Posted - 20 August 2007 :  09:32:36  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Debt collectors’ workload triples

THE amount of debt passed to collection agencies has tripled in the past six years to £21 billion, with more than 20m individual cases being handled in the past year alone.

The increase underlines the sharp rise in personal indebtedness in Britain, and a growth in the use of collection agencies to recover bad loans.

A report by the Credit Services Association (CSA), which speaks for 291 debt collection companies, found that of the £21 billion, £6 billion had been sold on to agencies for collection.

“Traditionally the work was on a commission basis #65533; the collector would keep 25% to 30% of the debt if they were able to collect it.

“Now the growing trend is for the lender #65533; which is normally a financial institution #65533; to sell the debt to the collection company. They will normally buy it for around 90p in the pound, and make their margin from their success in collecting the full amount,” Lancashire said.

Debt collectors found more people were moving house in order to avoid debts.

“The survey indicates that of the 20m cases handled last year, at least 1m were ‘gone-aways’, and the figure could well be higher than that,” he said.

The debt-collection industry holds its annual conference next month. Delegates are expected to call for a relaxation on access to identity records to help them pursue people attempting to evade debt.

“The government has moved the bias too far in favour of the consumer #65533; in this case the borrower.

“People tend to think of the losers being large, faceless corporations, but it can just as easily be a small businessman or a single mother missing out on child-support payments,” Lancashire said.

Source: timesonline.co.uk

See my Blogs:
http://bankruptcynews.blogs.bankruptcyhelp.org.uk
  Previous Topic Topic Next Topic  

 New Topic  Reply to Topic
 Printer Friendly
Jump To:
bankruptcyhelp.org.uk Forum © bankruptcyhelp Go To Top Of Page
Powered By: Snitz Forums 2000 Version 3.4.06