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Ideas/Section-10
Many women complain about
not having any credit. Those complaining are those who REALIZE that
they do not have credit, single women or divorced women, specifically.
However, there are many married women who have no credit because
financial matters are handled by their husbands, and they are not
even aware that they are without any type of credit rating. This
is a large problem in America today.
Divorce seems to be the predicament that
taunts women in search of their own good credit ratings. Either
the wife did not have any of her own credit during the marriage,
or the credit she shared with her husband took a bad turn during
the divorce.
The key to your credit success, regardless
of your marital success, is that you build your own "sole and
separate" credit. There are many benefits to be gained. First,
in the event that the marraige does not work out, each spouse may
part with their own credit. If the wife was always on time with
her payments and the husband was poor with his payment schedule,
they should be able to part ways with her credit intact.
Another good reason to have separate credit
is in the event a financial tragedy comes your way, leaving you
with no alternative but to file banckruptcy. It might be possible
that one partner could file while the other remains clear.
If your husband currently has all the credit,
have him place you on his accounts as a "sharer" of the
account. You want to be sure you share the account but not the contractual
liability. This way you will NOT be responsible for his errors.
If it does show as a negative on your rating, you will be able to
dispute it as you did only share the account. If the account is
in good standing, work on getting it on your credit rating as
you may take the responsi-bility for the good rating. For men in
similar situations, try the same method.
If neither the wife or the husband have
any credit, then both would sign the account as "joint"
in privileges and contractual liability. Continue this process until
you both have enough credit to get credit singularly. Then, as your
new sole and separate accounts begin to get established, start closing
the joint accounts you once shared. The purpose of this is
to establish your credit as "sole and separate".
Consider also the use of a joint checking
account. A clean checking history is very helpful in building credit,
however, be wary if your spouse is particularly neglectful when
maintaining a checking account-the end result could cause more harm
than good.