Friday, November 20, 2009


On Poverty, Interest Rates, and Payday Loans
...Georgia banned payday loans in May 2004 while North Carolina banned them in December 2005. These two events provide the authors with an opportunity to empirically investigate several effects of the removal of payday loans on household behavior. Morgan and Strain find that relative to households in other states, households in Georgia bounced more checks, complained more frequently to the Federal Trade Commission about lenders and debt collectors, and were more likely to file for bankruptcy under Chapter 7 after the ban of payday loans . . . The results for North Carolina, which the authors regard as preliminary, given the shorter period in which payday loans have been banned, are similar to those for Georgia. ...