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Adverse debt levels blight UK consumers personal finances
Debt levels are at an all time high in the UK. The younger generation tend to be feeling the pinch the most, but parents are increasingly being required to bail them out, often at great expense to their own limited mortgage or retirement savings. ...

Auto Loan Calculator - The Fast and Easy Way to Calculate Your Finances when Purchasing a Car
For many people looking for a new car or for a vehicle to replace their old ones, getting a car loan is an option they need to take. Buying a car on credit requires a lot of attention to details; there are interest rates, the monthly payments and...

How to Do Bad Credit Refinance
You may have heard that people with bad credit can't get anything financed. Well that's a myth because there are many companies that will offer you refinancing and loans no matter what your credit rating looks like. ...

The Question Is - To Refinance or Not?
What does it mean to refinance? Why would anyone want to consider it? There are numerous situations when someone would refinance. When we use the word refinance, we are basically referring to a loan: for example a car or house loan. It may...

The Wright Place- Finances
Women have a love/hate relationship with money. Most of us do not enjoy dealing with it, yet we know not having finances under control will cause our entire family to suffer. A recent guest on the show Karen Franks, explained how important...

 
War of the Worlds: Student Finance versus Life

It's a worrying time for current and prospective students. Figures from the Prudential, show that a third of UK university students have considered abandoning their studies due to the financial strain they have encountered. It is not surprising that many prospective students are finding the need to seriously think through the merits of going to university. With the increase in course fees, alongside decreases in government financial support, the current crop of graduates can expect huge debts (currently averaging over £13,000) when they enter the employment market, which they hope will reward them with a highly paid job.

However, as more students get pushed on to the higher education production line and undertake degrees, the once elitist qualification becomes devalued. Suddenly employers find themselves surrounded by graduates of ambiguous quality. Prestigious highly-paid careers are rare these days and graduates find themselves increasingly under pressure to jump through a number of hoops, with many interviews relying on an individual's ability to sell himself, rather than the basis of the academic work.

Students need to take responsibility for their own finances, while the government seeks our recognition of its actions (educating the unemployed is good for the books . and votes), without the state taking on responsibility (“it's an investment in your own future”).

Too many want to bury their heads in the sand and wait for a lottery win to make it all better. With over one trillion pounds of personal debt in the UK, students need to realise that the, "it could be you!" they pray for, is actually an "it is you . in debt" . with trapped wind more likely than wind-fall.

Part of the problem is hopeful expectation (alias denial), part is a fear of controlling your own personal finances (alias apathy), and part is a lack of knowledge (alias ignorance). The first one is difficult, and needs to be overcome by the individual. The other two however can both be overcome by looking for help. Sources of information need to be made available, actively promoted and sought out by consumers.

It's not like the information isn't there. there are plenty of financial product comparison sites loaded with information (and pictures): http://www.moneynet.co.uk/ for a start, or http://www.moneysavingexpert.com. The Financial Services Authority has its own finance help information for consumers http://www.fsa.gov.uk/consumer/index.html.

As the saying goes, "Seek and you shall find". It may be a hard lesson, but it is one that we must all currently embrace.


About the Author
Richard works in Edinburgh for a media company, occasionally writing for the personal finance blog Cashzilla ( http://cashzilla.blogspot.com/ ), and drinking too much coffee.

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