A BKR registration that you can no longer get rid of, not receiving benefits while you have been partially rejected and the sense or nonsense of the so-called bidding log of brokers. Radar pays attention to it on 1 May 2023.
Do you have a BKR registration from ING? Then you can hardly get rid of it
ING gives you a negative registration with the BKR if you do not pay a loan properly – like any bank. But where other banks deal reasonably with their customers’ registrations, ING is strict and stubborn. The bank almost always sells ‘no’ if you have solved your payment problems and then ask to remove a negative BKR registration. As a result, you have to wait extra long before you can get a mortgage or another type of loan. In addition, ING very quickly issues one of the strictest types of registration, which is intended for serious defaulters and makes it almost impossible to get a new loan. This is evident from the complaints that came in after our earlier broadcast about BKR registrations at the Stichting Onrechte BKR registration: more than half of the 1386 reports concerned ING. Why is the bank behaving this way? And who supervises that?
Disapproved for less than 35 percent, but still no WIA benefit
More than half of people fail to keep or find a job if they have been rejected for 35 percent or less. However, you will not receive a WIA benefit. The financial consequences are disastrous, with people with lower incomes being disadvantaged compared to those with higher incomes. What are the consequences, what are the rules, and what should be done here? Fons asks Minister Van Gennip of Social Affairs and Employment. Member of Parliament Pieter Omtzigt reacts in the studio.
The sense or nonsense of the broker bidding log
In September 2021 showed Radar with the hidden camera that some real estate agents in the overheated housing market were guilty of favoritism: information about bids was passed on and the sales price was increased. The big problem was that the buying process was not transparent. From 1 January 2023, the digital bid log is mandatory for brokers of the sector organizations NVM, VBO and VastgoedPro. Anyone who bids on a property will have access to the bidding log after the sale. In itself this provides transparency, but there appear to be differences in the bidding logs used by the trade associations. So what are the differences? And has this nipped in the bud the problem of nepotism or manipulation of the bidding process? Radar sorts it out.
Radarevery Monday at 8.25 pm on NPO 2
2023-05-02 00:46:06
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