Are you one of the millions of Americans who fear that company cutbacks may cause you to lose your job? With the national unemployment rate at the highest in 26 years, touching 8.1% in March of 2009, it is expected that millions of more Americans will lose their jobs this year before the economy gets better.
Though you may not be able to predict the stability of your job, what can you do now to protect your income and mortgage if a layoff occurs for you?
Contribute to Savings
Many individuals and families with good jobs and a mortgage do not have an emergency savings account set in place. What a tragedy that can be if a sudden loss of regular income occurs! To protect yourself and your family from a financial crisis, you should have a savings account set up with at least three, and ideally six, months of living expenses. That means you should look at your monthly budget and determine what basic costs you will incur, such as your house payment, groceries, car payment, etc.
If you have a little savings or no savings at all, start now. Open a savings account at your bank that you contribute money into each month. The more you can cut back now and put into savings, the better you will feel if you are suddenly laid off from work.
Buy Mortgage Insurance
Mortgage insurance is available that can help you pay your mortgage while you are unemployed. However, don't confuse mortgage insurance with Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI). PMI is a type of insurance you may be required to pay for each month with your regular mortgage payment. PMI protects your lender and pays them the balance of your loan in the event you default. This is for the sole benefit of your lender and doesn't help you prevent foreclosure.
Find an insurance agent that sells mortgage insurance. The type of policy you need is one that will take over all or a portion of your mortgage payment should you become disabled or find yourself unemployed due to layoffs. Premiums may be high, but the alternative could be a more expensive foreclosure if you are out of a job.
Find a Layoff Insurance Program
Many financial groups in many states offer “layoff insurance.” This type of income loss protection can help you pay your mortgage if you become financially unable to meet your mortgage obligation. However, you will usually be required to pay premiums for at least six to 12 months before you can file a claim. There may be other restrictions as well, such as a cap limit on the amount that the group will pay each month (i.e. meeting the principal and interest payment only and no tax escrow), and a limit on how long they will make your payment.
Groups that offer this benefit are not insurance companies, and thus, are not regulated by state insurance commissions in terms of financial reserves. Beware of groups who offer this type of benefit but are financially unable to pay claims.
This article is intended for general information. Always seek sound financial and legal advice before making any financial decision.
Mortgage Job Loss Protection
To lose a job, for any reason, is to lose something of value. Even work we didn't particularly like meant something to us. It gave us some type of identity, money, sometimes prestige and power. Loss of work leads to a general emotional loss. While it doesn't jolt our world as much as losing a spouse or a child, or even going through a divorce, it is similar to having a long-standing relationship break up or the death of a favorite family pet. We need to give ourselves time to grieve, to work through the stages of loss first identified by Elizabeth Kubler-Ross in her exploration of how we deal with death.
1. Denial.
The refusal to accept the reality of your layoff. If you don't believe it, it isn't real. You'll wake up tomorrow and find that it's all a bad dream. You tell yourself: "This really isn't happening to me, It is all a mistake. They'll call me back and everything will go on just the way it was."
2. Bargaining.
When the reality seeps in and denial is no longer a viable option, we move into the bargaining phase. We try to "make a deal" with someone, anyone, to rectify the situation. You promise: "I'll be good, really good. I'll do anything, God, if you just make this one thing okay."
3. Anger.
The bargains don't work so our emotions turn to anger. Life isn't fair but that's easy to say and hard to emotionally accept. The reality of what has happened makes your blood boil and you find yourself hissing under your breath: "It isn't fair. How dare that young punk throw me out after all I've done for this company? It's the government's fault -sending all those jobs overseas."
4. Depression.
As your anger fades and then turns inward against yourself, you start to feel scared of the future, mentally overwhelmed, and terribly abandoned. You obsess on your fears: "How am I going to survive? No one cares. I feel so alone."
5. Acceptance.
You are finally able to acknowledge the truth, that you will continue to live and, maybe if something good happens for a change, you'll thrive in a new environment. You admit: "I don't like it. I hurt. But I'm ready to move on and find something new and different."
It is when you finally reach acceptance, a long hard journey for some with prolonged periods of anger and depression along the way, that the future starts to take shape and you are finally able to look forward, not back. At that moment, and not until then, the floundering stops and you are able to look around with a hopeful spirit and develop an adventurous mood instead of wallowing in self-pity.
Both Patricia Payne & Virginia Bola are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Patricia Payne has sinced written about articles on various topics from Family, Finances and Real Estate. Helpful mortgage information at P. Payne works for. Patricia Payne's top article generates over 14800 views. to your Favourites.
Virginia Bola has sinced written about articles on various topics from Employment, Lose Weight and Interview Questions. A Licensed Psychologist and Rehabilitation Counselor, Dr. Bola developed for clients and has served as a recognize. Virginia Bola's top article generates over 27100 views. to your Favourites.
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