President Cyril Ramaphosa has committed himself to dealing with ballooning municipal debt. Electricity Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa says municipalities owe Eskom 78-billion rand. The President says the money is needed to secure the grid. #enca #dstv403
For more news: https://www.enca.com/
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There are 7 steps to bank balance with debt consolidation loans.
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Tips Seven. Don’t take your foot off the pedal till you arrive
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Professional debt advice is free from Licensed Insolvency Trustees. They will explain all your options so you can decide the best solution for your situation.
For more information about debt help services in Ontario, please call 519-310-JOHN (5646) or contact us via:
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Ever wanted to know what a financial counsellor is and how they can help you? This short video provides all the answers. Watch NOW!
Filling in my debt trackers and listing the 8 payments I made towards my student loans while enjoying a hot bowl of soup.
Here is what you should know if you are summoned to a pre-trial hearing for debt collection. There are several things you should know as a consumer to protect …
Farmers who are down on their financial luck will be able to go to mediation before being forced into receivership by banks.
A Farm Debt Mediation Bill will soon be introduced into Parliament which will require creditors to offer mediation to farmers who default on payments before they take any enforcement action.
The bill arises out of concern there is a lot of debt in the primary sector. Last year agriculture debt stood at $62 billion, with dairy $41.5b, sheep and beef $14.1b and “other” including horticulture $6.3b. Four years ago dairy farmer debt was $34b.
In announcing on Monday that the bill had been given the go-ahead by Cabinet, Agriculture Minister Damien O’Connor said farm debt had ballooned out by 270 per cent compared with 20 years ago.
READ MORE:
* Kiwi farmers likely to weather financial storms – Lincoln report
* Farmers more confident about financial future
“Farmers are especially vulnerable to business down-turns as a result of conditions that are often outside their control, like weather, market price volatility, pests and diseases like Mycoplasma bovis.”
The estimated cost to set-up the scheme is $350,000, and the estimated annual cost for administering the scheme is $250,000 to $300,000. This will be met from the existing MPI baseline.
It is expected each case of mediation will cost about $6000. This will be split between the lender and the farmer.
Federated Farmers and the Bankers Association both back the bill. Neither could provide statistics for the numbers of farmers who go into receivership every year.
A similar private member’s bill in the name of NZ First primary spokesman Mark Patterson was introduced last year but was withdrawn at select committee stage because it was considered unworkable.
O’Connor said the bill was “pragmatic”.
“The guts of it is early intervention – where either the farmer or the bank have an ability to go and seek mediation, which is a far better option than forced foreclosure,” he said.
The genesis of the bill goes back to the 1990s when NZ First had attempted to introduce a similar measure. O’Connor said Patterson’s bill had been reworked as a Coalition Government piece of legislation.
One of the reasons why the bill failed to advance last year was the mechanism proposed came too late in the process, by which time a farmer was already under water.
Last year the Reserve Bank warned that while financial stress in the dairy sector was falling, a small number of farmers were struggling to pay down debt.
The numbers of farmers who were at least 90 days overdue with their loans was 2 per cent out of 8059 owner-operators and 3911 sharemilkers.
That figure was an improvement on the worst period for non-performing loans in 2011, when it had risen to 4.7 per cent.
Two years ago 12.7 per cent of dairy farms were “potentially stressed” but that has dropped to 8.6 per cent.
Real Estate Institute spokesman Brian Peacocke said it was difficult to gather accurate statistic
There’s nothing like the stress of debt hanging over your head. We want to help you face your finances head-on and give you practical, godly principles to untangle any debt you’ve accumulated. Join us for our special Church seminar, How to Get Out of Debt God’s Way, on Friday, April 1stat 7:00 p.m.
In this innovative legal history of economic life in the Western Indian Ocean, Bishara examines the transformations of Islamic law and Islamicate commercial practices during the emergence of modern capitalism in the region. In this time of expanding commercial activity, a mélange of Arab, Indian, Swahili and Baloch merchants, planters, jurists, judges, soldiers and seamen forged the frontiers of a shared world. The interlinked worlds of trade and politics that these actors created, the shared commercial grammars and institutions that they developed and the spatial and socio-economic mobilities they engaged in endured until at least the middle of the twentieth century. This major study examines the Indian Ocean from Oman to India and East Africa over an extended period of time, drawing together the histories of commerce, law and empire in a sophisticated, original and richly textured history of capitalism in the Islamic world.