The rate of personal insolvencies in Herefordshire has increased by more than a third over the last two years, official data has revealed.
In 2015, 16.8 adults per 10,000 were declared insolvent in Herefordshire, according to Insolvency Service figures.
However by 2017 that figure had risen to 22.6, an increase of 34.5%.
Insolvency is when someone cannot pay their debts, and has to arrange a plan with an official body to pay off creditors. This can include being declared bankrupt.
The England and Wales average is 21.4, with Stoke, in Staffordshire, having the highest insolvency rate of 45 people per 10,000 in serious debt.
The figures are comprised of people who have been declared bankrupt, those who have been given debt relief orders (DROs), which are a form of relief for people on low incomes, and those with individual voluntary arrangements (IVAs), which are a voluntary way of paying back creditors.
In Herefordshire there were 350 new insolvency cases in 2017, up from 281 the year before.
IVAs were the most common form of insolvency, with 182 recorded last year.
Across Britain personal debt has ballooned over the past few years, with low interest rates and payday loans contributing to the rise.
Consumer debt reached more than £200 billion by the start of the year, returning to levels last seen in the financial crisis.
In 2017 almost 100,000 new insolvency cases in England and Wales were reported.
Overall in England and Wales the insolvency rate increased for the second successive year.
The data shows women are more likely to be insolvent than men.
Young people are also struggling, with the biggest percentage of new cases among 25 to 34-year-olds.






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