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Mythbusters: Payday Lending Version, Part II

Last year I analyzed about payday lending that the Pew Charitable Trust鈥檚 鈥淧ayday Lending in America鈥 project proved to be highly suspect in the first iteration of their study on borrowers. Their newest report () goes into more depth, revealing a love-hate relationship between borrowers and high-cost, short term loans. The report tells a conflicting story of dependence, need, stress, relief, and any other emotion associated with finances that you could think of. Borrowing from the Mythbusters again, here鈥檚 the skinny on Pew鈥檚 new report.

Myth 1: Payday loans are mostly paid back.
Truth: There is some truthiness going on here. Pew鈥檚 recent study finds that borrowers renew their loans or take out back-to-back loans in order to prevent defaulting. Only 14 percent of payday borrowers can repay their loans from a monthly budget. At some point, most borrowers inevitably default, require a cash infusion from family or friends, or use a tax refund (1 in 6) to pay off their loan debts.

Myth 2: Payday lending is an alternative for overdraft fees from checking accounts.
Truth: More than 录 quarter of borrowers stated that payday loans caused their overdraft fees. The loan and overdraft fees are not mutually exclusive.

Myth 3: Borrowers think the terms are fair.
Truth: Again, there is some degree of truthiness about this. It is less about fairness but more so about ease of access, desperation, and perceptions. Some 55 percent of borrowers reported that loans take advantage of borrowers. What鈥檚 more, perhaps the most revealing finding is that 37 percent would borrow on any terms. When people get desperate, it鈥檚 no surprise that they鈥檒l do desperate things.

The overall challenge with payday lending is that families lack income and assets to support their families. As one borrower remarked, this relationship between borrower and loans is sweet and sour. Sweet when there is some immediate relief but sour after the loan is made. Payday loans turn out to be a real problem for most customers, but the root here isn鈥檛 these terrible products. The root of the problem is the inability to earn income, set aside assets and build financially secure households. Fighting off the worst terms of the worst products is just a delaying measure until we can fix the structures and systems that aren鈥檛 serving the American people very well.

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David Rothstein

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Mythbusters: Payday Lending Version, Part II