This article outlines how successive UK governments’ policies first created a three tier system of credit unions and then posited credit unions as alternatives to payday lenders. The three tier framework is used for an analysis of loans offered on credit union websites. The findings indicate that while the first two tiers of credit unions now offer loans to people who have not saved with them previously, they do so in ways consistent with credit unions’ original character, rather than in ways that replicate commercial payday loans. The other tier of credit unions appears unable to offer such loans
The consequences of the financial crisis and successive UK governments’ austerity programmes include...
Inefficiencies in mainstream credit markets have pushed selected households to frequent high cost pa...
This Article argues that banks, which face both regulatory and public pressures to maintain good pra...
This article questions the findings of several studies which have concluded that the Credit Unions A...
Pressure is mounting on high cost credit companies to face tighter controls when they hand out short...
This article explores the extent to which the cost-cap imposed on high-cost short-term credit in the...
This paper examines the disclosures made on English credit unions’ websites. Credit unions without a...
The payday loan industry is set to change dramatically. For one, new regulation that will set a limi...
Payday lending schemes in the UK are often vilified as expensive and exploitative, and many welcomed...
In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, financial regulation and supervision has been signi...
Credit unions are financial co-operatives that conduct their business for their members. The princip...
Credit unions are financial co-operatives that conduct their business for their members. The princip...
Payday loans are controversial high cost, short-term lending products, banned in many US states. But...
The study investigates the reasons why British credit unions failed to achieve the levels of success...
Small firms continue to experience difficulty accessing adequate finance from formal external source...
The consequences of the financial crisis and successive UK governments’ austerity programmes include...
Inefficiencies in mainstream credit markets have pushed selected households to frequent high cost pa...
This Article argues that banks, which face both regulatory and public pressures to maintain good pra...
This article questions the findings of several studies which have concluded that the Credit Unions A...
Pressure is mounting on high cost credit companies to face tighter controls when they hand out short...
This article explores the extent to which the cost-cap imposed on high-cost short-term credit in the...
This paper examines the disclosures made on English credit unions’ websites. Credit unions without a...
The payday loan industry is set to change dramatically. For one, new regulation that will set a limi...
Payday lending schemes in the UK are often vilified as expensive and exploitative, and many welcomed...
In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, financial regulation and supervision has been signi...
Credit unions are financial co-operatives that conduct their business for their members. The princip...
Credit unions are financial co-operatives that conduct their business for their members. The princip...
Payday loans are controversial high cost, short-term lending products, banned in many US states. But...
The study investigates the reasons why British credit unions failed to achieve the levels of success...
Small firms continue to experience difficulty accessing adequate finance from formal external source...
The consequences of the financial crisis and successive UK governments’ austerity programmes include...
Inefficiencies in mainstream credit markets have pushed selected households to frequent high cost pa...
This Article argues that banks, which face both regulatory and public pressures to maintain good pra...