The proportion of people under 45 years commencing a legal path to repay debt, declining correct. Divorces and a fall in income are more likely causes of a remediation project. Older age get there more to it than younger groups. It reports the Central Bureau of Statistics today.
A total of 12.3 thousand authorized individuals and self-employed in 2014 to the debt restructuring, a decline of 1 percent annually. The group of 45- to 55-year-olds, with more than 3.5 thousand people last year accounted for 29 percent of all new debt restructuring. In 2002, that figure was 18 percent. The group of 35- to 45-year-olds remain the largest group with 30 percent. The proportion of 55- to 65-year-olds in debt is much smaller, but doubled since 2002, from 7 to 14 percent last year. When the two groups under 35 decreased the combined share of over 40 percent in 2002 to 23 percent in 2014.
The increase under-45s is partly explained because more people by the aging population in that age group fall than in 2002. However, the growth in debt restructuring in that group can not be attributed entirely to the aging population write. The proportion of 45- to 55-year olds in the debt grew between 2002 and 2014 faster than the proportion of all 45- to 55-year-olds in the Netherlands. As CBS reported earlier, this group is struggling. Unemployment is still rising, and a disproportionate share of the long-term unemployed also falls within this age group.


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