Posted on 07 April 2008. Tags: California, Consumer Rights League, Georgia, LA Times, North Carolina, research, Terry Kibbe
Terry Kibbe of the Consumers Rights League weighs in. From her piece in today’s Los Angeles Times:
“The Center for Responsible Lending and other so-called consumer advocacy groups rely on shoddy research in stirring gender, racial and class sensitivities to make the case against payday loans, as they did during their successful crusades in Georgia and North Carolina to run payday shops out of business. Though they claimed that the elimination of payday loans saved Georgia residents approximately $154 million per year, that claim was refuted by a Federal Reserve report (pdf) indicating that consumers ended up paying more through overdraft bank charges and late fees. Critics of payday loans are content to ignore that the mass of payday borrowers are middle-income, educated consumers.”
Terri goes on to oppose “big brother” restrictions on payday lending.
Posted in California, Center for Responsible Lending, industry critics, LA Times, media coverage, positive media coverage, states
Posted on 14 March 2008. Tags: bounced checks, Center for Responsible Lending, Colorado, Consumer Rights League, Dan Morgan, Denver Post, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Georgia, Terry Kibbe
Terry Kibbe of the Consumers Rights League has a guest piece today in the Denver Post that picks up on recent research by Don Morgan of the NY Federal Reserve.
Money quote: ”Morgan also questioned the validity of the research from the Center for Responsible Lending saying the Center ‘overstated the number of problem borrowers.’ He noted that banning payday loans actually leads to more people bouncing checks, filing for bankruptcy and fighting with collectors. After payday loans in Georgia were banned in 2004, Morgan found, “bounced checks in the Fed processing center in Atlanta jumped by 1.2 million, a 13% increase.”
Posted in Center for Responsible Lending, Colorado, Denver Post, Georgia, industry, industry critics, media coverage, positive media coverage, regulation, research, states