Filings collected from the nation's 90 bankruptcy districts showed 113,000 bankruptcies in December, down 3% nationwide from the same month a year ago. That followed a similar year-over-year decline for the the month of October. It had been four years since an individual month showed such an improvement.
In total, the nation recorded 1.55 million filings in 2010, an increase of 8% from 2009 and a far slower growth rate than the 32% jump recorded in the year before and the 33% jump the year before that.
At the law firm Mayer & Newton in Knoxville, Tenn., staff members continue to work six days a week to handle the massive bankruptcy caseload. But filings there have leveled off, and partner John Newton said the firm decided it did not need to replace an attorney that left about a year ago.
He said the economy in Tennessee, while still challenging, appears to be more stable than other parts of the country. And he said many of the people who need relief from their debts have already gone through the bankruptcy process.
"I think we've sort of turned the corner," he said.
Numbers indicated stark regional differences. Thirteen states recorded an annual decline, mainly in the South, with West Virginia leading the way with a 10% drop in cases. The West, however, indicated ongoing growth in filings, with numbers rising in places like Hawaii (22 percent), Utah (19 percent), California (19 percent) and Arizona (18 percent).
Tracy Compo of Tucson, said her family's financial troubles began about three years ago when her husband could no longer get overtime at work and mortgage payments became too costly. They tried unsuccessfully to get a mortgage modification before leaving the house to foreclosure.
Since then, they've tried to regain financial strength by selling their possessions — jewelry, clothes and anything else that could help pay the bills — but credit card debt has continued piling up. In December, they filed for bankruptcy in hopes of getting a fresh start.
"It's very depressing," said Compo, a 32-year-old mother of three. "It's degrading — like you've just lost all sense of control. I hate it. I'm embarrassed by it."
Bankruptcy filings have had a volatile decade, with a surge to records highs in 2005 as filers rushed to make their claims before Congress overhauled the system. Lawmakers made bankruptcy filings more cumbersome — and, as a result, more costly — amid concerns that some consumers were taking advantage of the system to escape debts.
Immediately after the law change, bankruptcy filings sank before steadily climbing again. Experts attributed the ongoing rise in part to an expected rebound after the shock of the 2005 law, and in part due to the financial conditions of consumers. The number of filings in 2010 matched the tally for 2004 — one of the highest-ever years before the spike attributed to the law-change.
"That is kind of the 'natural' level of filings in the kind of the economy we have," said Katie Porter, a professor at the University of Iowa College of Law. "We have a lot of debt and we have a lot of volatility. When you combine those things together, the debt makes it hard for people to withstand a shock to the system."
Those shocks are frequently job losses or medical bills, she said.
The return of bankruptcy filings to their pre-2005 levels also raises the question of how much was was accomplished by the law changes. Porter said the law appears to have accomplished little more than to make filing for bankruptcy more costly because of extra paperwork.
Bob Lawless, a professor at the University of Illinois College of Law who tracks bankruptcy data, said the difficulty in accessing consumer credit over the past couple years may be helping limit the number of people overly burdened by debt. He expects filings to be slightly lower in 2011.
No comments:
Post a Comment