A price cap on high-cost short term credit - FCA
Weighing up the evidence
To inform our proposed price cap on high-cost short-term credit (PAYDAY loans) the FCA carried out one of the biggest ever studies of this market. This involved gathering significany amounts of data on both the supply side ( payday loan firms ) and the demand side ( consumers ) and then using this to analyse the likely costs and benefits of different approaches. The scale of our analysis provides a rigorous basis for us to make an informed, evidence based judgment about the structure and level of a cap.
1) What happens to firms and firm's lending decisions as a result of a cap ?
2) What options are there for consumers who no longer have access to high-cost short term credit?
3) Are consumers better or worse off as a result of not getting high-cost short-term credit ?
The FCA looks at cost revenue and repayment records for 2.3million individuals
Ran a qualatative survey of over 100 payday loan firms
Looked at the costs revenue and repayment records for 16m loans
Investigated 52 million records for credit products
Conducted 2000 interviews with consumers by telephone
Looked at the credit scores for 4.6million individuals
POSSIBLE OUTCOMES FOR LENDERS - reduction in profits // Reduction in price of loans // Market exit
POSSIBLE OUTCOME FOR CONSUMERS - Missed bill payments // Impact of Debt Balances // Doing without // Going to a Loan Shark
Weighing up the evidence
To inform our proposed price cap on high-cost short-term credit (PAYDAY loans) the FCA carried out one of the biggest ever studies of this market. This involved gathering significany amounts of data on both the supply side ( payday loan firms ) and the demand side ( consumers ) and then using this to analyse the likely costs and benefits of different approaches. The scale of our analysis provides a rigorous basis for us to make an informed, evidence based judgment about the structure and level of a cap.
1) What happens to firms and firm's lending decisions as a result of a cap ?
2) What options are there for consumers who no longer have access to high-cost short term credit?
3) Are consumers better or worse off as a result of not getting high-cost short-term credit ?
The FCA looks at cost revenue and repayment records for 2.3million individuals
Ran a qualatative survey of over 100 payday loan firms
Looked at the costs revenue and repayment records for 16m loans
Investigated 52 million records for credit products
Conducted 2000 interviews with consumers by telephone
Looked at the credit scores for 4.6million individuals
POSSIBLE OUTCOMES FOR LENDERS - reduction in profits // Reduction in price of loans // Market exit
POSSIBLE OUTCOME FOR CONSUMERS - Missed bill payments // Impact of Debt Balances // Doing without // Going to a Loan Shark
Comment