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(Franklin Debt Relief offers a debt settlement program to consumers
and is not a credit counseling agency. The information presented
below is for educational purposes, so that consumers can make a more
educated decision on whether debt settlement, the service offered by
FDR, or credit counseling, the option described below, is a better
debt relief solution for their situation).
Credit counseling in its earliest form as a debt relief solution
dates back to the earliest forms of mass unsecured credit extensions
and charge cards in the 1920s. Many of the first formal credit
counseling agencies were created with the advent of the National
Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC) in 1951. The NFCC, much like
credit counseling today, was founded with the purpose of helping
major department stores and other credit grantors recover delinquent
debts, prevent bankruptcy, and encourage financial literacy amongst
consumers. In the 1980s and until today, as credit cards became
increasing popularity and getting credit became increasingly easier,
the credit counseling industry gained an important role in the
financial lives of more Americans.
The growing popularity of credit counseling was manifested in 1993
with the creation of the Association of Independent Consumer Credit
Counseling Agencies (AICCA). The AICCA was founded as an adversary
of the NFCC, which exclusively endorsed face-to-face consultations
and a more formal approach to credit counseling. Today most credit
counseling agencies offer phone meetings as an option for a
consultation, and the largest and most influential trade
organization for the credit counseling industry is the American
Association of Debt Management Organizations (AADMO).
Beginning in 2002 many credit counseling agencies came under heavier
scrutiny as both federal and state regulators started taking aim at
the industry as a whole. Much of the attention was devoted to
Ameridebt, who was sued by the Attorney Generals of Illinois,
Missouri, and Texas, as well as the FTC for misrepresenting the
nature of their business. As a result of their large up front and
monthly fees, many supposed “non-profit” credit counseling agencies
began being investigated by the IRS. Largely in the business of
issuing debt management plans instead of promoting financial
literacy, many of these companies lost their tax-exempt status.
With the passing of Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer
Protection Act (BAPCPA) in 2005, mandatory credit counseling
sessions are now mandatory in the 180 day period preceding the
official date of filing bankruptcy. Credit counseling promises to be
an important outlet for overextended consumers for years to come.
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