Access to consumer credit is influenced by many factors, such as amount and security of the consumer’s income, and credit card company and financial institution practices. Access is also driven by social, cultural and cognitive factors, including consumer understanding of the cost of credit; perceptions regarding ability to repay; cognitive influences regarding immediate consumption and delayed payment; understanding of the benefits and risks of debt to economic security; and the conflicts of interest inherent in the business of lending. Overall, bank and credit union credit has tightened since the global financial crisis. However, the study found that for many Canadians, the issue is less whether there is access to credit, but rather, “acc...
When debt becomes unmanageable, two options for a consumer debtor in Canada are: (1) enlisting the s...
Although the relationship between credit availability and financial decline leading to the global fi...
For two reasons, the conventional wisdom is that the poor are not heavy users of the insolvency syst...
Access to consumer credit is influenced by many factors, such as amount and security of the consumer...
Economic rehabilitation is the notion underlying Canada’s Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA), provi...
A continuing theme of our work, and that of others, has been the failure of insolvency law to keep p...
The number of consumer bankruptcies in Canada has risen substantially over the last twenty years. Us...
Excessive household debt contributed to the worst recession in decades. Insights about borrowing and...
During the past twenty years, the alternative financial services industry has increased in use and i...
When debt becomes unmanageable, two of the main options for a consumer debtor in Canada involve enli...
With increasing levels of household debt in recent years, the number of households that may be vulne...
The credit unions in British Columbia have experienced spectacular growth during the last fifteen ye...
Canadian consumers have a debt problem and averaged a nationwide debt-to-income ratio of 1.654 in 20...
A brief survey of the supply of and the demand for consumer credit in Canada discloses a dynamic sit...
Insolvency law policy is best informed by a comprehensive understanding of the policy objectives of ...
When debt becomes unmanageable, two options for a consumer debtor in Canada are: (1) enlisting the s...
Although the relationship between credit availability and financial decline leading to the global fi...
For two reasons, the conventional wisdom is that the poor are not heavy users of the insolvency syst...
Access to consumer credit is influenced by many factors, such as amount and security of the consumer...
Economic rehabilitation is the notion underlying Canada’s Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA), provi...
A continuing theme of our work, and that of others, has been the failure of insolvency law to keep p...
The number of consumer bankruptcies in Canada has risen substantially over the last twenty years. Us...
Excessive household debt contributed to the worst recession in decades. Insights about borrowing and...
During the past twenty years, the alternative financial services industry has increased in use and i...
When debt becomes unmanageable, two of the main options for a consumer debtor in Canada involve enli...
With increasing levels of household debt in recent years, the number of households that may be vulne...
The credit unions in British Columbia have experienced spectacular growth during the last fifteen ye...
Canadian consumers have a debt problem and averaged a nationwide debt-to-income ratio of 1.654 in 20...
A brief survey of the supply of and the demand for consumer credit in Canada discloses a dynamic sit...
Insolvency law policy is best informed by a comprehensive understanding of the policy objectives of ...
When debt becomes unmanageable, two options for a consumer debtor in Canada are: (1) enlisting the s...
Although the relationship between credit availability and financial decline leading to the global fi...
For two reasons, the conventional wisdom is that the poor are not heavy users of the insolvency syst...