As anyone who has seriously examined Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection knows all too well, filing bankruptcy may be the absolute worst thing that borrowers can do to improve their financial position. For desperate folk suddenly realizing that there is little they can do on their own to achieve debt relief, bankruptcy might seem like an attractive possibility. After all, from our earliest memories, Americans are taught to respect bankruptcy as the (for whatever reason) dignified end to debt crises. Whether playing board games or watching cartoons, we’re taught that bankruptcy is just what is supposed to happen once any borrower has debts that they can no longer responsibly manage. In our culture, bankruptcy is simply expected to be the final debt solutions to personal economic strife. Even as the nature of consumer debt changes from hospital bills and department store accounts to the burdens of credit cards too easily granted and too quickly filled to their limits, bankruptcy maintains a mythic allure as an all-inclusive cleanser for financial woes.
While there’s no simple equation that would allow borrowers in Hawaii to figure out whether or not bankruptcy protection would be a proper fit for their own family, any consumer who finds him or herself struggling to afford the minimum monthly payments from their credit cards should at the least see what other options are available. For that matter, Hawaiian debtors who have looked at their assembled bills with a realistic and clear eyed appraisal only to discover that their household capacity for gross income in the next few years put against the family cost of living expenses and utility obligations would not allow for the elimination of the total debt load must seek out the professional services now available throughout the islands. While your authors appreciate that many of the hard working men and women of Hawaii will do everything possible to pay back the loans that they have lawfully taken out in good times and bad, waiting until the last moment in the vain hopes of some mystical deliverance from crushing financial burdens will only end in heart ache and household economic instability. Like it or not, consumer credit is a fact of life in Hawaii and most everywhere across the United States, and that is why America first initiated bankruptcy protection: to offer borrowers a fresh start. Unfortunately, Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Hawaii no longer provides the same guarantees following the congressional legislation and subsequent alterations of the bankruptcy code that occurred in the fall of 2005, and many of the borrowers that fought until their last breath to right their household budget without employing high priced debt professionals only to inevitably decide upon bankruptcy protection as what they believed to be their final alternative came to find out far too late in the debt relief game that there were far more effective programs at hand. Within this article, we will explain a bit more about what personal bankruptcy protection now means to the Hawaiian borrower and what options may provide a less disastrous solution to spiraling financial obligations.
1. Eliminate the legal obligation to pay many of your debts..
This process of wiping the slate clean is called a discharge of
debts. The goal of a discharge is to reduce debt to give you a
fresh start. Whether it is through straight bankruptcy (Chapter
7 Bankruptcy) or through reorganization (Chapter 13 Bankruptcy),
most or all of your debts can be cleared.