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Politicizing consumer credit

Subject

Finance

Publishing details

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Authors / Editors

Heimer R;Akey P;Lewellen S

Publication Year

2017

Abstract

Using proprietary credit bureau data, we find that consumers’ access to credit decreases by 4.5 percent–8 percent when the borrower’s home-state U.S. senator becomes the chair of a powerful Senate committee. The reduction in credit access mostly affects historically credit-constrained consumers (low income and nonwhite and borrowers with poor credit scores), and is stronger in areas with less politically engaged constituents and more politically connected lenders. Additional evidence supports a “political protection” hypothesis—banks that are connected to powerful politicians consider fair-lending regulatory guidelines to be less binding. The results highlight the distinction between political power and legislative outcomes, and contrast recent findings that governments expand credit access to firms and consumers.

Keywords

Access to credit; Political protection hypothesis

Series Number

17-16

Series

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Available on ECCH

No


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