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Thank God!!She has 1500 a month left over???surely her fuel costs and living costs are not that expensive, families with children have alot less to live on after that? its tough times, but she should put away a nest egg for herself incase the rates do go up and she finds herself with an unexpected cost, medical car etc!
In fairness you can't blame banks for making you take out a mortgage. Or can youim one of the group that banks were throwing mortgages at 2 years ago.i
Age: 28
Annual gross income from employment or profession: 39k annual, 2610 monthly
Type of employment: Advertising (she's concerned about job security)
pays 1124 per month
Other borrowings – car loans/personal loans etc: 4k owing to her parents
Do you pay off your full credit card balance each month? No - 200 paid last month
If not, what is the balance on your credit card? 2k
Savings and investments: None
Do you have a pension scheme? No
Life insurance: Yeah, E16 a month
I have one.Ages of children: None
Can i just ask as for the study on financial anxiety, i think a more suitable case study would be those that cannot and have not had a social life in a long time, that struggle to make ends meet, that to me in financial anxiety, worrying about a change in lifestyle whilst yes is an anxiety i cant see it being a stressful financial situation, not a serios one to base a case study on!?
Sorry but that is a fairly insipid article all the same. The should have given the facts posted here and let joe soap comment as we did here.The resulting article is now up, with honourable mention to AAM, and a somewhat toned down synopsis of the advice here
She can fix her mortgage rate to give herself the reassurance that her monthly repayments will not go up again.
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