Workers drowning in an ocean of overwhelming consumer debt.

This is a a good issue for 'union' organizing... where are they? Out shopping?

Leigh


From Docuticker by Shirl Kennedy
http://www.docuticker.com/?p=14840

Usury Law, Payday Loans, and Statutory Slight of Hand
An Empirical Analysis of American Credit Pricing Limits

Source: Social Science Research Network (SSRN)
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1000041

In the Western intellectual tradition usury law has historically been
the foremost bulwark shielding consumers from harsh credit practices.
Historically, the United States commitment to usury law has been deep
and consistent. However, the recent rapid growth of the "payday" loan
industry belies this longstanding American tradition. In order to
understand the evolution of American usury law, this paper presents a
systemic empirical analysis of all fifty state usury laws in two time
periods: 1965 and the present. The highest permissible price of a
typical payday loan authorized under each state's usury law was
calculated. These prices were then translated into Annual Percentage
Rate (APR) format following the federal Truth-in-Lending Act price
disclosure regulations. Moreover, this Article also compares how each
state legislature describes its most expensive permissible payday
loan, with how that loan is characterized under federal price
disclosure law. It does so by suggesting a new financial concept which
I label: salience distortion. This analysis produces three findings:
(1) usury law has become more lax; (2) usury law has become more
polarized; and, (3) usury law has become more misleading.

These findings suggest that the numeric language in current state
usury statutes is not chosen because it helpfully describes some
expectation of commercial behavior. Rather, legislatures have chosen
the language of most current credit price caps because it sounds in an
ancient moral tradition - a mythology of sorts - that roughly
delineates popular perception of moral and immoral interest rates.
Exploiting this normative tradition as well as common behavioral
economic heuristics, many state legislatures use small, innocuous
numbers in usury law because they are attempting to minimize the
public and media outcry over their decision to legalize triple digit
interest rate consumer loans.

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