Dave Ramsey is factually incorrect
University of Kansas replies
| By Greg Fisher
I usually like Dave Ramsey but this is just wrong https://t.co/Y0agw6WFLS
— Kevin Eder (@keder) February 13, 2014
A high credit score simply means it's less risky to lend money to you.
— Kevin Eder (@keder) February 13, 2014
@keder I'm with Dave. FICO score is tied to managing debt, not really winning with money. My score is down since paying things off.
— Sarah Stevenson (@sarahrstevenson) February 13, 2014
@keder his point is that the only way to up your score is to keep accts open and use them and he encourages manual underwriting for mtgs.
— Sarah Stevenson (@sarahrstevenson) February 13, 2014
@keder Dave is known for hyperbole. The message of not freaking over your score is a good one though.
— Sarah Stevenson (@sarahrstevenson) February 13, 2014
@keder no financial guru is one size fits all. His goal though is to get people's eyes off managing debt and onto debt freedom.
— Sarah Stevenson (@sarahrstevenson) February 13, 2014
@keder @sarahrstevenson Another FYI, many companies look at your credit score before hiring. Not having a good score could cost you a job.
— Chris Marsh (@ChrisMarsh4) February 13, 2014
.@ChrisMarsh4, employers don't use credit scores. @DaveRamsey is wrong.http://t.co/WaTWbGofku http://t.co/a9g1IEYgs0 @Keder @SarahrStevenson
— Greg Fisher (@creditscoring) February 14, 2014
Leaders of the leaders of tomorrow
.@KUNews, this story still contains a quote of a false statement: http://t.co/WheuQg0gd6 Employers do not use credit scores. #journalism
— Greg Fisher (@creditscoring) February 13, 2014
@creditscoring the @KansanNews is our student paper. You will need to contact them at editor@kansan.com about the issue.
— University of Kansas (@KUNews) February 13, 2014
.@KUNews, I already contacted the editor-in-chief, & she responded. So did the source. There is still no clarification.@KansanNews @_jgentry
— Greg Fisher (@creditscoring) February 13, 2014