IndyColtsFan
Lifer
ummm, no. I don't remember ever going to a job interview and being required to submit my credit history.
You may not have, but if you signed a consent form for a background check, they probably ran one.
ummm, no. I don't remember ever going to a job interview and being required to submit my credit history.
That might be true in some instances, but in most instances, people dig their own holes by not controlling their own spending and as a result, if job loss occurs, they're screwed. I have little sympathy for them.
My wife has a condo from before we were married and we ran credit checks on everyone who applied to rent it. One person had a credit rating around 420 IIRC. Seriously? That is a sign of being extremely irresponsible. Your credit rating isn't going to be that low without repeated demonstrations of irresponsibility.
Did his wife work too? That's unfortunate, but they should have saved 6 months to 1 year of expenses and if his wife wasn't working, she needed to be. Having two car payments at the same time is insane, IMO.
How would you propose that prospective lenders judge a person's ability to pay back their loan?
I understand financial history plays a big part now in insurnace, security clearance, job etc... How do organizations come to the conclusion that financial history = trustworthy? Does a person with bad credit always mean untrustworthy.
For lenders, yes, credit history is important.
But, the opening post referred to stuff like insurance and security clearance, not the ability to pay back loans.
It is important for something like security clearance, for the reasons listed by another poster (bignateyk?)
he was irresponsible for not selling house and cars and getting less expensive stuff, and having savings only for 4 months (which is not enough to sell stuff)I love comments like that - people never lose their job? Never have medical bills? Never have legal expenses? Job markets never turn down? Factories never close? Lay offs never happen?
When people are punished for having bad credit, their also punished for having bad luck.
Back when Enron closed, there were thousands of people nation wide that lost just about everything they had. I did some computer work for a guy who worked for Enron. He had a 250,000+ house, 2 cars in the driveway and no way to pay for it. Everything had been fine for years, but within 4 months after Enron closed he and his wife had spent their saving paying the house note, car notes, insurance,,,,,. When I fixed their computer, he had 1 months worth of savings left, after that they were going to lose everything. I guess he was "irresponsible" for working for a company that went bankrupt?
So instead of judging a person by their character, we should judge them by their race, or maybe skin color, or how about their sex, along with their credit history?
...
Saying that "everyone" in a given group acts a certain way is wrong.
So instead of judging a person by their character, we should judge them by their race, or maybe skin color, or how about their sex, along with their credit history?
Saying that "everyone" in a given group acts a certain way is wrong.
A past history of doing the right thing.......like, for example, being responsible with your finances.I'm still waiting for you to tell us an objective measure which would accurately gauge people's trustworthiness.
he was irresponsible for not selling house and cars and getting less expensive stuff, and having savings only for 4 months (which is not enough to sell stuff)
I'm still waiting for you to tell us an objective measure which would accurately gauge people's trustworthiness.
There are a lot of ways to measure the "quality" of a person. But for me, the one true measure of a person is how well they take care of their children. But I dont figure security clearance checks will care about stuff like that.
Downgrade car(s). downgrade house. rent a room out. get an additional job. all possible options, and honestly situation could have been entirely avoided with normal reasonable responsible planning.Yes, the wife worked, but her salary was only able to pay either the house note, or the car notes, but not all of it. So every month they slipped a little further and further behind.
plan for that possibilityIt was one of those cases where 1 person in the relationship made the majority of money, and paid most of the bills. When that person lost the job, their world came crashing down around them.
its sad that this is something to be proud of (not commentary on you, but americans in general)My wife and I bought a house within our budget. If one-or-the-other of us loose our job, we can still pay the house note. Unlike a lot of people who buy stuff based on the highest wage earner.
will fail. gonna drive up costs as companies hire delinquents and have to learn the hard/expensive wayTexas is talking about passing a law that prohibits using credit scores for choosing job applicants and setting insurance rates, and I will be glad when that law passes.
you can point fingers and try and pass the blame however you want. at the end of the day, given all the information people are making irresponsible decisions. easy credit is available to everyone, yet not everyone has this problem. so how is logical to blame the availability of credit instead of poor decisionmaking? you can put whatever you want into law, but bad people are still going to do bad things, stupid people will still do stupid things, and irresponsible people will still be irresponsible.My opinion - there is a link between easy credit and poor credit scores. If credit was less easy to come by, people would be forced to manage their money better.
whether or not financial irresponsibility extends to other arenas is debatable, but you must agree that its pretty solid proof of financial untrustworthyness.But no, I do not think that a poor credit score makes a person less trustworthy. It really depends on the person, and blank statements should not be used.
Most people have missed a payment, and it doesnt mean they have bad credit. To get the type of credit scores that are going to be impacting employment, you are going to need a long and consistent history of f'ing up. Bad luck doesn't ruin credit. Poor planning and spending habits do.Most people have stole something at one time or another, does that make them a full time thief? No it does not.
Most people have gotten drunk at one point or another, does that mean they have a drinking problem? Probably not.
its sad that this is something to be proud of (not commentary on you, but americans in general)
will fail. gonna drive up costs as companies hire delinquents and have to learn the hard/expensive way
That isn't an objective measure.
So is using a credit score. Credit score places a number on a person, something taking care of your children, being a good person overall can not do - unless your in prison, then you get a number.
I don't think there is any doubt that it is a good measure of your financial responsibility.
To get the real value of a person's trustworthyness takes too much time and effort to evaluate.
Credit score is a decent evaluator of that.
If you can't adjust your lifestyle to accomodate your expenses, then why should you be expected to adjust to work situations. Flexibility is an asset for employees.
If you can't adjust your lifestyle to accomodate your expenses, then why should you be expected to adjust to work situations. Flexibility is an asset for employees.
I lend for a living. I look at the score but typically ignore medical and, in a lot of cases, foreclosures/repos. However, if there is a charge off with a company in my industry, that's almost a guaranteed turn down.wow.. some good credit only Nazi's here..
very unforgiving about peoples problems and issues..