Not exact matches
Over at WaPo, wherein I argue that a) when we hit the next recession, many policy makers will point to our higher - than - average
debt / GDP ratio as
evidence that we have too
little fiscal space to engage in offset fiscal stimulus, and b) those policy makers will be wrong.
Parrott and Zandi concede there's
little evidence that credit is tighter based on either average loan - to - value ratios and
debt - to - income ratios.
While the high (and rising) U.S.
debt / GDP ratio does lead to some concern, there is
little convincing
evidence that this alone will cause U.S. yields to rise.
Scott Hannah, president of the Vancouver - based Credit Counselling Society, which helps consumers who are drowning in
debt, says he's seen
little evidence households have learned anything from the financial crisis.
But while the authors found
little evidence that student debtors were more likely to end up on their parent's doorstep among all young adults, they also found
evidence that the link between
debt and boomeranging varied by race.
We find
little evidence supporting unsecured cards as a good choice for bad
debt:
The contract with the lender places you on the hook for the
debt, and there's
little incentive for the lender to take you off the note unless there's
evidence that your name was added fraudulently.
Verdict: Very
little evidence of offering
debt consolidation or of being a christian organization.
From the complaints received and the cases brought, the States have seen
little evidence that
debt settlement companies provide any other useful services such as credit counseling, debtor education, or getting interest rates reduced before settlement negotiations are initiated, which can take several months, or even years.