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      Are High-Interest Loans Predatory? Theory and Evidence from Payday Lending

      1 , 2 , 3 , 4
      The Review of Economic Studies
      Oxford University Press (OUP)

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          Abstract

          It is often argued that people might take on too much high-cost debt because they are present focused and/or over-optimistic about how soon they will repay. We measure borrowers’ present focus and over-optimism using an experiment with a large payday lender. Although the most inexperienced quartile of borrowers under-estimate their likelihood of future borrowing, the more experienced three quartiles predict correctly on average. This finding contrasts sharply with priors we elicited from 103 payday lending and behavioural economics experts, who believed that the average borrower would be highly overoptimistic about getting out of debt. Borrowers are willing to pay a significant premium for an experimental incentive to avoid future borrowing, which we show implies that they perceive themselves to be time inconsistent. We use borrowers’ predicted behaviour and valuation of the experimental incentive to estimate a model of present focus and naivete. We then use the model to study common payday lending regulations. In our model, banning payday loans reduces welfare relative to existing regulation, while limits on repeat borrowing might increase welfare by inducing faster repayment that is more consistent with long-run preferences.

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          Choice Inconsistencies Among the Elderly: Evidence from Plan Choice in the Medicare Part D Program.

          We evaluate the choices of elders across their insurance options under the Medicare Part D Prescription Drug plan, using a unique data set of prescription drug claims matched to information on the characteristics of choice sets. We document that elders place much more weight on plan premiums than on expected out of pocket costs; value plan financial characteristics beyond any impacts on their own financial expenses or risk; and place almost no value on variance reducing aspects of plans. Partial equilibrium welfare analysis implies that welfare would have been 27% higher if patients had all chosen rationally.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            The Review of Economic Studies
            Oxford University Press (OUP)
            0034-6527
            1467-937X
            May 01 2022
            May 07 2022
            September 23 2021
            May 01 2022
            May 07 2022
            September 23 2021
            : 89
            : 3
            : 1041-1084
            Affiliations
            [1 ]Microsoft Research and NBER
            [2 ]Facebook
            [3 ]Berkeley and NBER
            [4 ]Dartmouth and NBER
            Article
            10.1093/restud/rdab066
            7e08c92a-66c7-43e3-ac4d-199d2af74a28
            © 2021

            https://academic.oup.com/journals/pages/open_access/funder_policies/chorus/standard_publication_model

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