Federal law mandates the removal of personal bankruptcies from credit reports after 10 years. The removal’s effect is market efficiency in reverse. The short-term effect is a spurious boost in apparent creditworthiness, especially for the more creditworthy bankrupts, delivering a substantial increase in both credit scores and the number and aggregate limit of bank cards. The longer-term effect is lower scores and higher delinquency than initial full-information scores predict. These findings relate to both the debate over the bankruptcy code and the wisdom of influencing market clearing by removing information
Financial innovations are a common explanation for the rise in credit card debt and bankruptcies. To...
Finance scholars disagree on how real world financial markets work. On the one hand, efficient marke...
Practically all industrialized economies restrict the length of time that credit bureaus can retain ...
Federal law mandates the removal of personal bankruptcies from credit reports after 10 years. The re...
In many countries, lenders are restricted in their access to information about borrowers' past defau...
As this article shows, the pro-debtor U.S. Bankruptcy Code alone can cause credit rationing, even wi...
Several studies attributed the rise of household bankruptcy in the past two decades to the decline o...
This article analyzes the relationship between consumer bankruptcy patterns and the destruction of s...
Profound changes have taken place in consumer finance over the past twenty-five years. The availabi...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, 2002.Includes bibliograp...
In Chapter 1, co-authored with Amir Kermani we ask the following question: can an increase in the su...
textSince the 1980s, household debt has been increasing rapidly. The high level of household indebte...
Early evaluations of Truth‐in‐Lending have observed impressive gains in consumer knowledge about int...
This paper utilizes a unique new data set on credit card accounts to analyze how people respond to c...
Finance scholars disagree on how real world financial markets work. On the one hand, efficient marke...
Financial innovations are a common explanation for the rise in credit card debt and bankruptcies. To...
Finance scholars disagree on how real world financial markets work. On the one hand, efficient marke...
Practically all industrialized economies restrict the length of time that credit bureaus can retain ...
Federal law mandates the removal of personal bankruptcies from credit reports after 10 years. The re...
In many countries, lenders are restricted in their access to information about borrowers' past defau...
As this article shows, the pro-debtor U.S. Bankruptcy Code alone can cause credit rationing, even wi...
Several studies attributed the rise of household bankruptcy in the past two decades to the decline o...
This article analyzes the relationship between consumer bankruptcy patterns and the destruction of s...
Profound changes have taken place in consumer finance over the past twenty-five years. The availabi...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, 2002.Includes bibliograp...
In Chapter 1, co-authored with Amir Kermani we ask the following question: can an increase in the su...
textSince the 1980s, household debt has been increasing rapidly. The high level of household indebte...
Early evaluations of Truth‐in‐Lending have observed impressive gains in consumer knowledge about int...
This paper utilizes a unique new data set on credit card accounts to analyze how people respond to c...
Finance scholars disagree on how real world financial markets work. On the one hand, efficient marke...
Financial innovations are a common explanation for the rise in credit card debt and bankruptcies. To...
Finance scholars disagree on how real world financial markets work. On the one hand, efficient marke...
Practically all industrialized economies restrict the length of time that credit bureaus can retain ...