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November 27th, 2023 at 3:51 pm
New Study Shows How Overregulating Short-Term Lenders Harms Consumers
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We at CFIF have consistently highlighted the peril of federal, state and local government efforts targeting the short-term consumer lending sector.

Less than two years ago, we specifically sounded the alarm on a New Mexico law artificially restricting interest rates on short-term consumer loans.

Well, a new study entitled “A New Mexico Consumer Survey:  Understanding the Impact of the 2023 Rate Cap on Consumers” that surveyed actual borrowers confirms our earlier warnings:

Key findings include:

•Short-term,small-dollar loans help borrowers manage their financial situations, irrespective of the borrower’s income.

•The rate cap has failed to improve the financial wellbeing of New Mexicans, specifically those who had previously relied on short-term, small-dollar loans.

•Most former short-term, small-dollar loan users struggled with paying their bills since the rate cap took effect on January 1, 2023. At the same time, a majority of borrowers indicated they were unable to access credit at some point following the rate cap.

•When unable to obtain credit, consumers said they were left with poor alternatives, including late bill payments, skipping urgent appointments or vital expenses, or pawning valuables.

•The vast majority of borrowers want the option to return to their previous lender, demonstrating support for the loan options available before the rate cap.”

The lesson is once again obvious:  Although bureaucrats claim to help struggling consumers through such overregulatory efforts as capping repayment rates, the real-world impact only eliminates a source of reliable, legal short-term loans to navigate temporary emergencies.

To illustrate, a 2018 Federal Reserve System Board of Governors study on the economic wellbeing of U.S. households found that almost 40% of U.S. families don’t couldn’t cover even $400 in emergency expenses.  Outrageously, 51% of military service members live paycheck-to-paycheck.  Unfortunately, credit cards aren’t always a viable option, and traditional bank loans are unavailable due to the small amounts needed.  Although higher-income Americans with stronger credit histories can borrow from banks, use assets they possess as leverage or use their savings amounts, people with lower credit scores and little in savings cannot.  According to the Fair Isaac Corporation, some 46% of consumers possess credit scores below 700, meaning that traditional bank loans aren’t possible for them.

Fortunately, short-term consumer finance loans can allow struggling Americans to access money needed to meet emergencies.

Under counterproductive laws like New Mexico’s, however, consumer finance lending becomes less available.  The unintended consequence of that is sadly foreseeable:  More people seek out illegal loansharks, suffer overdrafts, or simply fail to cover temporary costs.  As the World Bank found, such regulatory and legislative efforts as New Mexico’s lead to “increases in non-interest fees and commissions; reduced price transparency; lower number of institutions and reduced branch density; and adverse impacts on bank profitability, in addition to the lack of access for smaller and riskier borrowers.”

As expected, New Mexico’s H.B. 132 restrictions are already punishing the very people that it ostensibly claims to protect, making consumer finance lending more difficult, more expensive and less available.  It offers an ominous warning to other jurisdictions considering similar laws, and a quick lesson to New Mexico political leaders who can correct their mistake.

 

November 14th, 2023 at 11:36 am
Image of the Day: Israel Versus Hamas
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As pro-Israel marchers congregate in Washington, D.C., today and too much of the world swallows Hamas’s portrayal of itself as victim, an oldie but a goodie provides a helpful primer and corrective:

The Difference Between Israel and Hamas

The Difference Between Israel and Hamas