Rolling
Jubilee spent $400,000 to purchase debt cheaply from banks before 'abolishing'
it, freeing individuals from their bills
theguardian.com,
Adam Gabbatt in New York, Tuesday 12 November 2013
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| 'Our primary purpose was to spread information about the workings of this secondary debt market,' said Andrew Ross. Photograph: Spencer Platt/Getty Images |
A group of
Occupy Wall Street activists has bought almost $15m of Americans' personal debt
over the last year as part of the Rolling Jubilee project to help people pay
off their outstanding credit.
Rolling Jubilee, set up by Occupy's Strike Debt group following the street protests
that swept the world in 2011, launched on 15 November 2012. The group purchases
personal debt cheaply from banks before "abolishing" it, freeing
individuals from their bills.
By
purchasing the debt at knockdown prices the group has managed to free
$14,734,569.87 of personal debt, mainly medical debt, spending only $400,000.
"We
thought that the ratio would be about 20 to 1," said Andrew Ross, a member
of Strike Debt and professor of social and cultural analysis at New York
University. He said the team initially envisaged raising $50,000, which would
have enabled it to buy $1m in debt.
"In
fact we've been able to buy debt a lot more cheaply than that."
The group
is able to buy debt so cheaply due to the nature of the "secondary debt
market". If individuals consistently fail to pay bills from credit cards,
loans, or medical insurance the bank or lender that issued the funds will
eventually cut its losses by selling that debt to a third party. These sales
occur for a fraction of the debt’s true values – typically for five cents on
the dollar – and debt-buying companies then attempt to recoup the debt from the
individual debtor and thus make a profit.
The Rolling
Jubilee project was mostly conceived as a "public education project",
Ross said.
"We're
under no illusions that $15m is just a tiny drop in the secondary debt market.
It doesn't make a dent in the amount of debt.
"Our
purpose in doing this, aside from helping some people along the way – there's
certainly many, many people who are very thankful that their debts are
abolished – our primary purpose was to spread information about the workings of
this secondary debt market."
The group
has focussed on buying medical debt, and has acquired the $14.7m in three
separate purchases, most recently spending $13.5m on medical debt owed by 2,693
people across 45 states and Puerto Rico, Rolling Jubilee said in a press
release.
“No one
should have to go into debt or bankruptcy because they get sick,” said Laura
Hanna, an organiser with the group. Hanna said 62% of all personal bankruptcies
have medical debt as a contributing factor.
Due to the
nature of the debt market, the group is unable to specify whose debt it
purchases, taking on the amounts before it discovers individuals’ identities.
When Rolling Jubilee has bought the debt they send notes to their debtors
“telling them they’re off the hook”, Ross said.
Ross, whose
book, Creditocracy and the case for debt refusal, outlines the problems of the
debt industry and calls for a “debtors’ movement” to resist credit, said the
group had received letters from people whose debt they had lifted thanking them
for the service. But the real victory was in spreading knowledge of the nature
of the debt industry, he said.
"Very
few people know how cheaply their debts have been bought by collectors. It
changes the psychology of the debtor, knowing this.
“So when
you get called up by the debt collector, and you're being asked to pay the full
amount of your debt, you now know that the debt collector has bought your debt
very, very cheaply. As cheaply as we bought it. And that gives you moral ammunition
to have a different conversation with the debt collector."

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