Online Lenders Alliance: New Center for Responsible Lending Report is a Deeply Flawed, Intentionally Misleading, and Methodologically Unsound Salvo in
ARLINGTON, Va. (September 27, 2022)—In response to a new “research report” released by the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL), Online Lenders Alliance Executive Director Andrew Duke issued the following statement:
“This so-called research report uses a flawed approach to reach flawed findings regarding the small dollar loan market. There are also patently false claims made throughout the report. As with most of their other activities in this space, they start with the conclusion that arbitrary rate caps will improve consumers’ lives and bend over backwards to make their data support their position.”
Among the many issues with the report and its methodology:
“If CRL were to get their way, the consumers who rely on short-term credit products to manage their finances and make ends meet would be worse off, period,” Duke continued. “If they are going to wage a war on credit-strapped consumers, they should at least be transparent about their goals and use honest tactics instead of misleading propaganda.”
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An abundance of data refutes many of the other claims CRL makes in its report. First, the Online Lenders Alliance published the results of a consumer survey in Illinois following the imposition of a 36% rate cap by the state on March 23, 2021. The survey shows that 93% of consumers who had taken out loans with APRs greater than 36% believed that the loan helped them manage the financial situation they were facing at the time. In addition, 79% of consumers would like the option to go back to their previous lender if they had a funding need with only 9% of consumers saying they would not like the option to go back. In other words, the vast majority of consumers benefited from the option to take out loans that best suited their unique needs. More information on this report can be found?here.?
Second, an academic study on installment loan products found that only about 20% of loans were part of a sequence of loans, which would indicate rollover or refinancing. This directly refutes CRL’s claims that 60% of installment loans are refinanced. More information from this study can be found?here.
Third, the Morning Consult published a fintech report in 2021 that asked respondents how their credit scores were impacted after taking out a consumer loan through a fintech company. A large plurality of respondents said that their credit score had improved after taking out the loan, regardless of income, ethnicity, and other demographic characteristics. More information from this study can be found?here.
About The Online Lenders Alliance
The Online Lenders Alliance (OLA) is the first trade association in FinTech. OLA is focused on credit inclusion, bringing together a diverse group of innovative companies who share a common goal: to serve hardworking Americans who deserve access to trustworthy credit. Our members are entrepreneurs, publicly-traded companies, lenders, credit bureaus, advertisers, lead generators, compliance professionals, and software developers who are leveraging technology to responsibly improve consumers' financial health. Consumer protection is our top priority and OLA members abide by a rigorous set of Best Practices and Code of Conduct to ensure consumers are fully informed and fairly treated. For more information, please visit?www.onlinelendersalliance.org.
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2 年“Like everything in life, you must “follow the money!” Regarding the CRL, this policy group has an agenda anathema to access to credit for the approximately 6 in 10 USA households who cannot access $500 cash when faced with a sudden financial crisis! “While its work is “intended to guide policymakers and opinion leaders,”[5] observers have periodically questioned the reliability of CRL’s claims. In 2015, a Washington Post article that fact-checked CRL research regarding auto loan costs identified “a lack of transparency” on CRL’s part about the basis for its calculations.[6] In 2012, academic David Stoez[7] published a paper looking at how, in its criticisms of payday lenders, “CRL misrepresents data in order to further its reform agenda.”[8] CRL has controversially received funding from the Sandler Foundation of Herb and Marion Sandler. Herb Sandler is a banker who has been criticized for mortgage lending practices in advance of the 2008 financial crisis.” TheBusinessOfLending.com