Quick Read
Ramsey warned the couple that without boundaries, financial support becomes a permanent subscription only they can cancel.
George Kamel clarified that the $33,000 in unsecured credit card debt dies with the father-in-law, meaning heirs owe nothing if no assets exist.
Ramsey pushed the couple to convene all four siblings with a written, time-limited contribution plan instead of absorbing the full burden alone.
A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.
A couple called The Ramsey Show and explained that their 84-year-old father-in-law lost his retirement money to bad investments and a divorce, lives on Social Security alone, carries $33,000 in credit card debt, and has about $100 left over each month. In essence, they wanted to know: When can we stop sending him money we didn’t budget for? Dave Ramsey’s answer was blunt.
“The truth is it won’t end until you end it.”
After a knee surgery, the requests for money escalated: a new recliner, a shower remodel for accessibility, then $1,000 more, and now hearing aids priced between $1,500 and $5,000. Ramsey warned the caller, whom he nicknamed Susan, that “it is Bank of Susan forever, and he’s gonna come for $1,000, then $2,000, then $5,000.”
The Mistake George Kamel Warned the Couple Not to Make
Ramsey’s advice is sound, and George Kamel’s add-on offered a helpful insight that most families would miss. Kamel told the caller that if her father-in-law truly has no assets to back the $33,000 in unsecured credit card debt, then it won’t be the couple’s problem to solve: “If they sue him, there’s nothing they can take. And it’s not going to pass to you guys.”
As Ramsey has explained on other episodes, when someone passes away with credit card debt and no assets, “those creditors get nothing,” and the kids, parents, and in most states the spouse, are not responsible.
Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement
Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.
Now look at why it could really hurt the couple to help pay this down. The current average credit card APR is 21%, near record highs. On a $33,000 balance at 21%, interest alone could run to roughly $578 a month before a single dollar of principal is touched. The father-in-law cannot make a dent in that with $100 a month left over after expenses, and neither can the couple without permanently re-engineering their own budget around his card statement.





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