“The products reflect a basic fact: Many low-income borrowers are desperate enough to accept any terms. In a recent Pew Charitable Trusts survey, 37 percent of payday loan borrowers responded that they’d pay any price for a loan. In 2012, New Hampshire joined states like Georgia and Arizona that have banned triple-digit-rate payday loans but allow similarly structured triple-digit-rate auto-title loans. And as in Ohio, Texas lenders started defining themselves as credit repair organizations, which, under Texas law, can charge steep fees. Texas now has nearly 3,500 of such businesses, almost all of which are, effectively, high-cost lenders.”
How payday lenders pop back up even after states crack down
- Post author:The Freedom Watch Staff
- Post published:August 6, 2013
- Post category:Network Archives
Tags: Alternative News, Bankocracy, CLibertyC, constitutional liberty coalition, economic Trends, Entrepreneurship, for life and liberty, Land Of The Flea, Middle Class Dismissed, money, regime uncertainty, Resistance, sound money, The Freedom Watch
The Freedom Watch Staff
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