>> ASIAONE / BUSINESS / MY MONEY / BUILDING YOUR NEST EGG / CREDIT AND LOANS / STORY
Jamie Ee
Sun, Mar 23, 2008
The Straits Times
'I never thought it would end up so badly'

THE debts began to pile up soon after her husband lost his job at a pub six years ago.

Earning $2,000 a month as a nurse, Madam Aisah (not her real name) suddenly became the sole breadwinner.

Yet the couple, with their four young children, lived a middle-class lifestyle: They had a maid, an executive flat and a European-made car.

Loans for the flat and car still needed to be serviced, apart from the maid's salary and monthly bills.

Unaware of other avenues, Madam Aisah, 46, found the credit card companies' credit lines tempting. She took the bait and rolled over monthly bill payments or took advances on her three credit cards.

Soon, she found the high interest charged adding to her debts too. Desperate, she added six new credit cards to utilise their credit lines.

Madam Aisah sold her car and sent the maid home, but it was too little, too late. Her total debt escalated to $100,000 and she received numerous letters from lawyers threatening court action.

She became depressed and quarrelled frequently with her husband.

Then came a turning point. A United Overseas Bank officer directed her to Credit Counselling Singapore. It helped her draft a debt management plan, which her creditors accepted.

Today, Madam Aisah is paying about $1,600 a month to her creditors. She hopes to be debt-free in seven years.

Her husband, too, has found a job as a security officer.

'I never thought it would end up so badly, but it happened,' she said.


Is this article useful to you?
 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  'I never thought it would end up so badly'
   
 
  'I thought I could just spend. I did not think about the future'
   
 
  He never falls back on credit
   
 
  Trapped by lure of the high life
   
 
  Going to Orchard Road A LUXURY for Bedok family
   
 
  No choice
   
 
  Recession? How bad can it get?
   
 
  Expats here are feeling the pinch too
   
 
  How one family copes
   
 
  We can barely stay afloat, say low-income folk
   
>> RELATED STORY
'I never thought it would end up so badly'
Trapped by lure of the high life
Interest-only loans: the pros and cons
Paying off credit card debt
Good debt bad debt

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

News: British graduate debt drops for first time in six years

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
Search: