Title: Consumer Credit Regulation the Third Way
1Consumer Credit Regulation - the
Third Way?
- Australian Credit at the Crossroads Looking for
Landmarks8 9 November 2004Melbourne - Keynote Address
- Iain Ramsay, Osgoode Hall Law School, York
University, Toronto, Canada
2Reform initiatives
- UK
- EU
- Canada
- South Africa
- Australia
- New Zealand
- CI Asia/Pacific Consumer Credit Project
- US
3Background to reforms
- Changes in consumer credit consumer lending
revolution. - Deregulation, securitization, application of
sophisticated computer technologycredit scoring,
spread of all purpose credit cards. - Consumer credit a driver of the economy.
- Credit used for services once paid for by state
e.g. education. - Increasing internationalization of credit
institutions (credit bureaux) and forms (credit
cards, sub-prime lending).
4Contemporary issues
- The role of disclosure in credit transactions
- Over-indebtedness
- Responsible lending
- Regulation of the sub-prime market
5Existing approaches to regulation of consumer
credit
- Information approach v. social consumer
protection. - Autonomy v. paternalism.
6The Third Way approach to consumer credit
regulation
- Attempt to empower individuals in market
(information/controls on catastrophic risks).
Protect Autonomy. - Recognise importance of achieving affordable and
accessible credit for all - Address overindebtedness through a wide variety
of preventive and regulatory measures - Regulation as multifaceted, hybrid, influencing
market interactions rather than merely policing
infractions.
7Payday loans as example
- Combination of increasing competition,
disclosures, regulation, development of
institutional alternatives - Competition-reduce switching costs for consumers
from sub-prime to prime (credit scoring).
Encourage entry of mainstream lenders. - Information disclosures.
- Regulation targeted on problem areas (e.g.
rollovers) - Interest rate ceilings as a proxy for fraud.
- Targeted enforcement. Need for public agency
public interest groups. - Development of institutional alternatives role
of community reinvestment, credit unions.
8Behavioural economics and consumer credit
regulation
- Behavioural biases deviating from rationalistic
assumptions of neo-classical economics. - Misestimations of risk, overoptimism, inability
to process more than 5-7 pieces of information. - Distinction between planner self and impulsive
self time inconsistent preferences.
9Behavioural economics and credit cards
- Underestimation and overoptimism
- Structure of credit card pricing overprices long
term contingencies (need to borrow) underprices
short term (transaction fees, annual fees). - Businesses to compete successfully must exploit
these biases. - Automatic increases in credit limit results in
greater borrowing even by consumers who are not
liquidity constrained.
10Potential responses
- Targeted disclosures to individuals paying
minimum payments. Individualize disclosures. - Default term for cards e.g. no automatic
increase. Control minimum repayment amounts.
Consumer must opt in. - Retains consumer choice.
11Behavioural economics and payday loans
- Why do individuals pay extremely high interest
rates for short term loans? - Some have no choice but others choose.
- Individuals seem willing to pay high discount
rate to receive small sums of money immediately.
Hyperbolic discounting. - Costs of waiting for money processed as foregone
consumption rather than foregone interest. - Underestimation and overoptimism result in
rollovers.
12Behavioural economics and future of credit
disclosures
- Information overload response Schumer box
key financial info. - Exploit loss aversion wealth warnings-but
target them?. - Harness availability heuristic but avoid
disclosures that result in overestimation of
risk. - Personalise information individuals are poor
statisticians. The potential of computer
technology to target disclosure. - Post-contractual disclosures.
13Behavioural economics conclusions
- Utilize to develop debiasing interventions
- Distinction between rational and vulnerable
consumer? - Distinction between autonomy and paternalism?
Regulation to protect future autonomy. - Limits on disclosures at time of contract in
preventing overindebtedness. - Recognise from outset that trouble may occur and
build in mechanisms of adjustment
14Impact of technology, credit scoring and credit
bureaux
- Credit scoring and credit bureaux substantially
reduce credit suppliers information problems. - Credit scoring and credit bureaux facilitate
growth of credit cards and sub-prime market. - Development of risk based and behaviour driven
pricing.
15Impact of negative and positive credit bureaux
- Negative claimed to result in greater incentives
not to default. - Positive info facilitate a deeper credit
market facilitate competition. - Impact on default rate?
16Credit scoring
- Need for transparency and dialogue on these
systems. - Like much technology--- costs and benefits e.g.
might permit individual to graduate from
sub-prime to prime.
17Responsible lending
- Objectives reduce default, control unfair
practices - EU Directive check data baseensure suitability
best advice - UK reform of extortionate credit credit
licensing - US responsible lending bills to combat predatory
lending - South Africa concept of reckless credit
- Switzerland detailed rules on checking database
ensure that proposed loan does not reduce
individual below minimum living requirements
18Responsible lending
- Relationship to role of technology and credit
scoring? - Need to incorporate standards into everyday
practices of employees. May need to change
structure of incentives.
19Responsible lending and overindebtedness
- What is optimum level of overindebtedness in
society? - Establish standardtax or fine if dont meet
standard.