New anti-debt measures in force

Connexionfrance

New anti-debt measures in force"


Play all audios:

Loading...

CHANGES RELATED TO FAMILIES IN DEBT WILL TAKE 120,000 OFF FRANCE'S BAD PAYERS’ REGISTER NEW measures that have come into force this week will help one in six families in serious debt to


“get back to a normal life and bounce back,” according to the Finance Minister. The new rules mainly concern people who have either been placed on a register of bad payers, the FICP


(consulted by lenders before agreeing loans) due to missed payments, or who are involved in legal procedures related to serious debt. The latter, known as _surendettement_, is similar to the


procedures available for businesses who declare payment difficulties. They can initially stave them off with formal support and negotiation with creditors, or eventually declare bankruptcy.


The new rules limit being placed on the register to five years rather than ten or eight, taking 120,000 people immediately off the FICP register. Other new rules include: n People who apply


to the Commission de Surendettement to undergo debt procedures, and are accepted, will not be able to be sued by creditors. n For those undergoing the procedures, banks will be forbidden


from closing their accounts or sending in bailiffs. n Applications for the procedures will have to be dealt with faster: at first they go through a stage of being examined by the Banque de


France, who will have to do this in three months instead of six. Finance Minister Christine Lagarde says this will reduce the period of “uncertainty”, which can often cause “personal and


family breakdown”. The measures are part of her Consumer Credit Law that was passed by parliament in June. The Finance Ministry says that out of about nine million people in France who use


credit facilities, 2.6 million have repayment difficulties and about 750,000 are officially surendettés. The president of an association against debt, FFAC, Jean-Louis Kiehl, said the


measures do not go far enough and it is necessary to put in place ones which will stop people getting into debt in the first place. Photo: Remy Steinegger


Trending News

Hines VA Hospital surgeon appointed Chairman of VA’s Transplant Surgery Surgical Advisory Board

The Transplant Surgery SAB advises VA’s National Surgery Office (NSO) and VA leadership. During the three-year appointme...

Erectile dysfunction drugs are essential and probably life-saving and should be provided to all men who need them just as birth control should be prov

Access through your institution Buy or subscribe Phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors are commonly used to treat erectile dysf...

Toowoomba - 4350 - location - abc news

This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, AAP, CNN and the BBC World Service whi...

Page Not Found.

Page Not Found. Hopefully you will find what you are looking for here....

Sturdy solstice could enter overseas market - farmers weekly

24 MAY 2002 ------------------------- STURDY SOLSTICE COULD ENTER OVERSEAS MARKET By Andrew Blake RECENTLY recommended w...

Latests News

New anti-debt measures in force

CHANGES RELATED TO FAMILIES IN DEBT WILL TAKE 120,000 OFF FRANCE'S BAD PAYERS’ REGISTER NEW measures that have come...

Toddler dead, 10 injured in ghaziabad slum fire

A two-year-old girl was charred to death and over 10 people were injured as a fire gutted 300 shanties in Uttar Pradesh’...

But first, infrastructure: creating the conditions for artificial intelligence to thrive in the pentagon

Artificial intelligence isn’t sexy. I would know. In 2017, I led data creation and quality control for xView, one of the...

13 years in jail for cutting penis

A MAN WHO ATTACKED HIS LOVE RIVAL WITH A STANLEY KNIFE HAS BEEN SENTENCED A MAN who cut off his love rival’s penis has b...

Bitcoin was supposed to change the world. What happened?

Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg | Getty Images A few years ago, Bitcoin advocates were touting its potential to transform th...

Top