ICFE
Holiday Alerts:
(1) Avoid The Ghost of Christmas Past!!!
(2) Things To Know About Holiday Gift Cards
Avoid
The Ghost of Christmas Past!!!
by Jim Garnett
ICFE Board of Education Advisors - The ICFE's Ask Mr.G on ICFE.info
The "Ghost of Christmas Past" is on the loose again this
holiday season, and millions of Americans will have an encounter
with him. He is an enemy, a robber, and a thief. He is virtually
invisible as he blends in like one of our old family friends each
season.
This "Ghost of Christmas
Past" is the debt still owed on past Christmas(es) when yet
another Christmas rolls around. If not detected and dealt with,
he can literally suck the life out of a family's finances!
Each holiday season many
families charge their Christmas expenses on credit cards and pay
the minimum payment on the balance each month. As I will show you,
this can take multiple years and thousands of dollars of interest
to pay for just one Christmas, yet alone numerous Christmases.
So, let's "ghost-buster"
this spook by following some simple steps:
1. Plan Your Christmas.
Think about Christmas before it is upon you by setting aside money
year round through a "Christmas Club", a special savings
account, or by saving change in a bottle. Also shop for bargains
in January for next Christmas.
2. Proportion Your Christmas.
Your gifts should be proportioned by what you can afford, not by
what you have access to buy. Most of us have access to much more
credit than we can ever repay in a timely manner. Determine what
you can afford by how much actual money, not plastic money, you
can spend toward Christmas.
3. Pay For Your Christmas.
Christmas's charged on credit cards can easily "haunt"
us for years to come. Consider that the average amount charged on
credit cards for Christmas is around $1000 per family. If 2% minimum
payments are made toward that debt at 12% interest, it will take
over 8 years to repay it with an additional $545 interest charged.
That means your kindergartener's Christmas won't be paid off until
she graduates from 8th grade! That means her Christmas presents
were long gone before they were actually paid for.
And that is only one
Christmas. Often Christmas debt is "layered" year after
year! It is much better to simply pay for your Christmas each year
within the boundaries of what you can actually afford.
4. Personalize Your Christmas.
Why not put some real thought into this Christmas and make something
instead of buy something. Gifts like baked goods, handmade ornaments,
or even pictures of the kids give your Christmas the personal touch.
You will substitute labor and creativity for cost, and your gifts
will be just as, if not more so, appreciated.
Things You Should Know About Holiday Gift
Cards
by Paul Richard, RFC
Another alert goes to purchasers of gift cards. Not all of them
are created equal - some expire - and consumers are being caught
unaware of the charges and fees connected with gift cards, especially
those that aren't spent right away.
According to surveys
conducted by retail merchant association some 53 percent of surveyed
individuals indicated they would be purchasing gift cards from one
or more merchants this gift giving season. The main reason is convenience
and not having to visit so many stores.
The cards are being marketed as a gift giver's dream because they
are easy to hold on to and in most instances, balances may be added
to, however buyer beware because almost all gift cards come with
fees, some with user limitations and most, but not all, do eventually
expire.
Some of the other fees involved include, but are not limited to:
purchase or issuance fees, inactivity fees and replacement fees.
The inactivity fees, usually begin at the end of an 18-24 month
period, with most gift cards begin assessing fees of $1.50 to $2
per month, taken from the balance of the card until there is either
no balance or the expiration date has been reached. Consumers thinking
about gift cards as part of their holiday giving are encouraged
to ask questions and read the fine print. Also emphasize to the
recipient that the card should be used promptly because of non-use
fees and an expiration date. For example, a J. C. Penny gift card
must be used in 12 months from date of purchase or a $1 per month
fee is accessed after the 12th month.
Gift cards are not the
same as paper gift certificates, which have a set dollar amount
and rarely an expiration date. Many states have laws on their books
requiring retailers to track gift certificates and turn the money
over to a state fund, if the certificates are not used within a
certain time period. Gift cards are also subject to theft. It is
rare when an ID required to use a gift card, so thieves find them
very appealing. In some states, the most a consumer can lose on
a stolen gift card is limited to $50 after it's reported. However
if the thief spends some of it before its discovered lost or stolen,
the money spent by the thief if usually not recoverable through
the merchant.
For
a FREE consultation on your debt or for more information
Paul
Richard, RFC (Registered Financial Consultant)
Executive Director
Institute of Consumer Financial Education (ICFE)
The Credit Counseling Foundation
is a regional sponsor of the nonprofit Institute of Consumer Financial
Education (ICFE) and ICFE materials viewed on this sight are copyrighted
by the ICFE and used with permission, of the ICFE exclusively for
ICFE Corporate Sponsors.
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