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Federal Reserve: Health Insurance Can Keep You Out of Bankruptcy

One of the questions raised since Congress passed the Affordable Care Act (ACA) six years ago is whether decreasing uninsured rates would also reduce medical bankruptcy. One mechanism the ACA enacted was a requirement that states expand Medicaid, but the U.S. Supreme struck that down, leaving state governments with the choice of expanding the program

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Don’t Confuse Your Student-Loan Problems With the Government’s

Much reporting on college education or student loans confuses or misleads audiences. One source that’s been particularly outspoken in the last couple months, The Wall Street Journal, ran a few articles worrying about the large sums of federal student loans going unrepaid, perhaps $200 billion. It’s a serious issue, but it’s important that student-loan debtors

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Pawned Property Versus Repossessed Property in Bankruptcy

It’s understandable that debtors would pawn property before considering New York bankruptcy. It’s sort of like a securitized payday loan. It’s also common for debtors’ property to be repossessed, which I’ve discussed here. What’s not necessarily intuitive is why after a debtor files bankruptcy the repossessed property is returned but the pawned property is not.

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How to Find Information About a Bankruptcy Case (Without Talking to Your Lawyer)

Because most New York bankruptcy cases are filed by debtors who are unfamiliar with the process, undoubtedly many want information about their cases’ progress. The same goes for creditors who have been informed of their debtors’ bankruptcies. Good bankruptcy attorneys naturally supply their clients with new developments as they arise, but with the rapid advances

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So Your Employer Is in Bankruptcy…

Business bankruptcies appear in the news so regularly that it’s easy to ignore them. However, when it’s your employer’s business that files bankruptcy, then it’s your problem. Here are some facts you’ll want to know. First, it’s necessary to distinguish which chapter the business is filing in. Businesses can’t file in chapter 13, so that

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Federal Reserve Survey Shows Continued Household Financial Anxiety

Understanding the state of household finances in the U.S. can give debtors a benchmark to compare their circumstances to. The Federal Reserve recently published its “Report on the Economic Well-Being of U.S. Households in 2015,” which is based on the Survey of Household Economics and Decisionmaking (SHED). The SHED is only three years old and

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Public Licenses in Bankruptcy

There are a variety of licenses issued by government bodies that debtors might have before commencing a New York bankruptcy case, typically driver’s licenses and occupational licenses. As a result, debtors might want to know how the Bankruptcy Code treats them to ensure that they can keep them. The Bankruptcy Code clearly sides with debtors

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4 Reasons Older Americans Should Consider Bankruptcy to Handle Debts

A few weeks ago I wrote about a Boston-area man who lost his high-paying white-collar job and filed bankruptcy to discharge Parent PLUS student loans he took out for his children. Since that post, it appears the debtor settled with the creditors. Saliently, he had been unemployed for fourteen years, which raises the topic of

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Can a Bad Economy Be Grounds for a Chapter 13 Hardship Discharge?

By the time most people file chapter 7 New York bankruptcy, they’ve concluded that there’s really nothing more they can do to repay their debts. They can’t work more jobs or magically earn more money. Thus, their hardship entitles them to a discharge. Chapter 13, by contrast, is aimed at debtors with some hope of

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