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Make Me Smart Question

How Elizabeth Warren learned personal bankruptcy isn’t a rich people problem

Jana Kasperkevic Apr 10, 2018
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) listens to testimony from witnesses during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing. Drew Angerer/Getty Images
Make Me Smart Question

How Elizabeth Warren learned personal bankruptcy isn’t a rich people problem

Jana Kasperkevic Apr 10, 2018
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) listens to testimony from witnesses during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing. Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Every week on Make Me Smart, we ask an expert, celebrity, author or other prominent person: “What’s something you thought you knew that you later found out you were wrong about?” It’s called the Make Me Smart Question.

When we think of bankruptcy, we often think of celebrities who have gone broke, companies that failed and crooks who are trying to cheat the system. But as it turns out, bankruptcy is most common among middle-class Americans.

On this week’s Make Me Smart episode, Sen. Elizabeth Warren answered the Make Me Smart question (at around the 39:30 mark in the player below).

What is something that you thought you knew and you later found out you were wrong about?

“Many, many years ago when I first started studying families in bankruptcy I thought I knew who filed for bankruptcy. I had come from a family that had been turned upside down financially but my family had never filed for bankruptcy. So I figured, you know, the people who actually go into bankruptcy, they are probably trying to cheat the system, take advantage,” said Warren.

However after taking a closer look, the senator said she realized she was “very, very wrong.”

“People who filed for bankruptcy were by and large hard-working middle-class families — folks who had worked hard, gone to college, gotten married, bought a house, had kids and then had just been turned upside down by a serious medical problem, a job loss or a death or divorce in the family,” she added.  

She is right.

Who files for bankruptcy?

When Jonathan Fisher, a research scholar at the Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality, looked at who filed for bankruptcy in the U.S., he found that it was mostly middle-income Americans. According to his analysis, “median income for bankruptcy filers is $42,000, which is $6,000 less than the national median.”

“Bankruptcy filers are more likely to be employed than the U.S. as a whole, and they are more likely to be employed 50-52 weeks,” he wrote. “Bankruptcy filers are more likely to be veterans. It is known that veterans have a higher likelihood of financial difficulty, but it was not known that these financial difficulties also translated into bankruptcy. Bankruptcy filers are less likely to be immigrants but more likely to be disabled. Another important fact established here is that the bankruptcy population is aging faster than the U.S. population as a whole. Since 2004, bankruptcy filers are now over-represented among those 55-64, while that age range was under-represented in bankruptcy before 2004.”

What it means to declare bankruptcy

Filing for bankruptcy means that a person or business is unable to pay their debts in full. Getting bankruptcy protection and discharging their debt — including credit card and medical debt — could mean a second chance for people who struggle financially. Individuals can file for two different types of bankruptcy: Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. If you file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and you have valuable assets, those assets will be liquidated and used to pay off a portion of your debts. Under Chapter 13, instead of selling off your assets, you come up with a debt repayment plan for the next three to five years.

The most crippling type of debt is medical debt

Back in 2009, researchers from Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School and Ohio University found that medical bills are involved in 60 percent of personal bankruptcies in the U.S. The research was based on survey of families who declared bankruptcy in the early 2007. About 75 percent of the people who said they went bankrupt because of their medical debt had health insurance.

In 2013, NerdWallet estimated that 1.7 million people would declare bankruptcy that year due to outstanding medical bills. Their research found that people who have high medical debt often use up all of their savings, end up racking up credit card debt, and are unable to pay for necessities such as food and rent.

What about student loan debt?

Earlier this year, the Department of Education announced that it is reviewing the policies that make it nearly impossible to shed student loans when declaring bankruptcy. Currently, to get rid of student loans through bankruptcy, the borrower must be found “hopeless” by court. The department is seeking public comments from student loan borrowers to help it understand whether the rules are too strict and need to change.

About 44 million Americans owe nearly $1.4 trillion in student loans.

When asked by the U.S. Congress about whether this kind of debt could have an impact on the economy, newly appointed Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that it “absolutely could hold back growth.” He said he was “at a loss to explain” why we don’t allow student debt to be discharged in bankruptcy.

“This is fiscal policy. This is something for you, not something for the Fed,” Powell told the U.S. Congress.

Self-filing for bankruptcy can cost you
An increase in personal bankruptcies may not be a bad thing

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