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The Myth of the Rational Borrower: Examining Rationality and Behavioralism in Consumer Bankruptcy Law Reform

This study challenges the assumption of rationality in consumer bankruptcy law reform and explores the impact of behavioral biases on borrower behavior. It examines the motivations of lenders and borrowers, the implications of limiting bankruptcy discharge, and the role of credit market developments.

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The Myth of the Rational Borrower: Examining Rationality and Behavioralism in Consumer Bankruptcy Law Reform

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  1. The Myth of the Rational Borrower: Rationality, Behavioralism and the Misguided “Reform” of Consumer Bankruptcy Law Susan Block-Lieb Fordham University Law School Ted Janger Brooklyn Law School

  2. U.S. Bankruptcy Policy Debate • Policy prescriptions turns on why people break their promises: • whether the lender or borrower are viewed as opportunistic or unfortunate? • Paradigmatic Borrower/Bankrupt • Rational/irrational? • Paradigmatic Lender • Rational/irrational? Lender Borrower

  3. Worldview Motivating “Bankruptcy Reform” – Rational/Rational • Assumptions: • Rational Consumers • Rational and/or strategic actors • Bankruptcy discharge gives consumers a “free walk” on their consumer debt • Consumers who don’t file for bankruptcy will repay their debts in full • Rational (but impaired) Lenders • Cannot price discriminate • Cannot determine borrower’s type (honest/dishonest) • Increases in the cost of credit lead to adverse selection • High risk borrowers are price inelastic • Low risk borrowers are price elastic • Even in a competitive market, credit will be rationed • All consumers will pay a higher interest rate and borrow less than is “efficient.” • Deadweight loss results

  4. Policy Prescription – Eliminate Bankruptcy Discharge • Limiting access to bankruptcy discharge will result in greater supply and lower cost of credit.

  5. Some data supports the “rational borrower/rational lender” view:

  6. Household Debt Has Increased In Absolute terms

  7. And In Relation to Disposable Income

  8. But other data suggest that lenders do not think that borrowers are opportunistic

  9. Interest Rates Have Gone Down in Absolute Terms

  10. Moreover, the relation between market interest rates and credit card interest rates has remained roughly constant.

  11. Paradox • Even though bankruptcy filings have increased considerably over time • And in good times as well as bad • The supply of consumer credit has increased unabated. • The interest rate paid on consumer debt has declined while the markup (risk premium) has remained constant.

  12. And credit card lending remains very profitable

  13. Theory predicts credit rationing and increasing interest rate • Data raise questions • Why would lenders ever agree to lend to opportunistic borrowers?? • Data fit better with a different story, which takes into account developments in the consumer credit market and in consumer lending technology . . .

  14. U.S. Credit Markets in 1978 • Usury limits • Inability to price risk • Limited access to credit information • Local transactions/local reputation

  15. U.S. Market changes beginning in 1978 – Usury • Marquette • Usury limits eliminated in national lending transactions • National lending suddenly became more profitable than local lending • But only if you could get over the information asymmetry.

  16. U.S. Changes in the mid-1980s – Information Asymmetry • National credit reporting • Credit scoring • Risk based pricing • National lending technologies • Securitization • National clearinghouses (Visa/Mastercard)

  17. Worldview Motivating “Bankruptcy Reform” – Redux • Assumptions: • Consumers • Rational and/or strategic actors • Bankruptcy discharge gives consumers a “free walk” on their consumer debt • Consumers who don’t file for bankruptcy will repay their debts in full • Lenders • Cannot price discriminate • Cannot determine borrower’s type (honest/dishonest) • Increases in the cost of credit lead to adverse selection • High risk borrowers are price inelastic • Low risk borrowers are price elastic • Even in a competitive market, credit will be rationed • All consumers will pay a higher interest rate and borrow less than is “efficient.” • Deadweight loss results Yes they can Not necessarily

  18. Implications for lenders • Enables lenders to market credit to higher risk borrowers without fear of adverse selection • Lending can be profitable even with higher default rates • And higher bankruptcy filing rates

  19. Now profitability and high default rates are not mutually contradictory

  20. Is this a problem? • That depends on your view of the borrower? • Rational • Only “quasi-rational.”

  21. What are the implications of a behavioral model of the market for consumer finance? For rational lenders and quasi-rational consumer borrowers

  22. Behavioral decision research suggests that consumers will purchase and borrow more than rational actors. It also suggests that consumer borrowers will be slow to react to forestall default and that rational lenders face market incentives to exploit borrowers’ decisional biases.

  23. Rational consumers possess: Complete information Stable preferences Quasi-rational consumers possess: Bounded rationality Preferences influenced by biases in decisionmaking such as framing and anchoring effects Rational v. Quasi-Rational Purchasing:

  24. Rational vs. Quasi-Rational Borrowing: • (i) What are the costs and benefits of filing for bankruptcy? • (ii) How much do I owe already? • (iii) What is the cost of the new credit transaction? • (iv) What is the likelihood that my income will either remain constant or increase in the next period? • (v) Which is stronger, my preference for current consumption or my preference for consumption in the future?

  25. A rational borrower: Complete information Computational facility A quasi-rational borrower: Credit card users spend more than those spending cash or writing checks. Why? Cognitive dissonance Underestimation of ability to repay at months’ end Underestimation of total purchases within past month Decision framed by credit limits as signal of future earnings potential How much do I owe already?

  26. A rational borrower: Complete information Computational facility A quasi-rational borrower: Confusing array of financial products offered at complex terms Financial illiteracy; time constrained Rule of thumb  what is the cost of the monthly payment? Does disclosure regulation help? What is the cost of the new credit transaction?

  27. A rational borrower: Complete information Computational facility A quasi-rational borrower: Ambiguity in decisionmaking Overconfidence bias What is the likelihood that my income will either remain constant or increase in the next period?

  28. A rational borrower: Complete information Stable preferences Ability to delay gratification Applies a single discount rate over time A quasi-rational borrower: Framing and other influences on preferences Immediate gratification Hyperbolic discounting Which is stronger, my preference for current consumption or my preference for consumption in the future?

  29. A rational borrower: Complete information Framing of events irrelevant Willingness to walk away from investments, if marginal costs exceed marginal benefits Willingness to sell = willingness to buy A quasi-rational borrower: Prospect theory Sunk investments Endowment effects What should I do in the event of default?

  30. Research agenda: • Behavioral decision research suggests that: • Consumers will borrow more than a rational actor model predicts, but there has been no testing of this hypothesis. • Consumers will be slow to react to signs of default, and more reluctant to liquidate possessions than RAM predicts, but there have been few studies. • Rational lenders face market incentives to exploit quasi-rational consumers’ decisional biases.

  31. Policy implications: • Consumer bankruptcy law; consumer finance regulations • Because rational lenders face incentives to exploit biases in decisionmaking, consumer protection regulations should invalidate or otherwise limit certain Ks or K terms • Disclosure regulation may be insufficient consumer protection, standing alone • Framing affects disclosure • Lenders’ incentives to craft terms to evade disclosure requirements • Financial literacy education; budget and credit counseling

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