How To Pay Off Credit Card Debt
January 11, 2010 by Emanual Boer
Filed under Credit Debt
Stages of the lifespan were linked to stress over Visa card debt and the confidence players felt in their power to get out of debt.
Identification of factors associated with credit card debts. Few studies have focused on psychological, social, or economic barriers to getting out of debt or on how to help consumers actually change their behaviors to eliminate credit card debt.
The first stage of the study for which these data were collected was conducted in order to develop a measure of people’s intention to reduce their credit card debt, and to create a manual for professionals to use in helping debt-troubled consumers change their behavior.
The aim of this 2nd stage is to look at the connection between theory-based stages of the lifespan, factors related to worrying debt, and behavior change.
In recent research of college students, the consensus of multiple studies was that at least one credit card is held by at least 70% of college students.
In order to assist people in reducing troubling credit card debt, we need to take a more differentiated approach which considers the person’s life stage, their level of concern about reducing their debt, and their confidence that they can take steps to reduce their debt.
In each analysis, age groups are compared with respect to two variables: How much they worry about their debt and how confident they are that they can successfully resist temptations in order to reduce their debt.
Confidence in one’s abilities in a situation, otherwise known as self-efficacy, plays a large role in whether someone will begin taking steps to get out of troubling debt, and whether they will persist once they start.
Primarily based on the expert interviews and buyer phone interviews, the following 3 behaviors were outlined as proof for shedding card debt : one ) Paying more than the minimum needed every month, two ) Stopping needless buying, and three ) Stopping Mastercard use.
The participants were divided into groups based on stages of the lifespan. For confidence, participants rated the confidence they felt they would have in getting rid of credit card debt when faced with ten situations, such as “Your car breaks down.”
When participants were divided into age-related quartiles, a significant difference was found between age and confidence in ability to get out of debt. The group made up of those in Later Adulthood and Very Old Age showed significantly more confidence in their ability to get out of debt than the other three groups.
Those in Later Adolescence are less confident in their abilities to resist temptations and thereby to reduce their credit card debt. Many young adults see credit cards as a necessity for obtaining an education or supporting themselves while they are in school.
Paying for a wedding, supporting children, and buying things for the home are some ways in which people increase their credit card debt at this stage of life.
In discussion of worry and confidence, those in Later Adolescence may have more concern and less confidence about getting out of debt because they have less experience with money management.
The most effective way to diminish worry and increase confidence over credit card debt is to begin taking steps to get out of debt. A third is to pay attention to every step a person takes in the right direction towards getting out of troubling debt.
Learn more about Credit Card Debt Forgiveness. Stop by Emanual Boer’s site where you can find out all about a Debt Settlement Attorney and what it can do for you.






