Interest rate caps : protection or paternalism


Autoria(s): Howell, Nicola; Wilson, Therese; Davidson, James
Data(s)

01/12/2008

Resumo

In a context where over-indebtedness and financial exclusion have been recognised as problems in Australia, it is undesirable that those who can least afford it, pay a high cost for short-term consumer credit. Evidence points to an increase in consumer debt in Australia and consequential over-indebtedness which has been shown to lead to a wide range of social problems.2 There is also evidence of financial exclusion, where consumers suffer a lack of access to mainstream financial services, and in Australia this is particularly the case with regard to access to safe and affordable credit.3 Financial exclusion can only exacerbate over-indebtedness, given that financially excluded, predominantly low income consumers , have been shown to turn to high cost credit to meet their short term credit needs. This is a problem that has been explored most recently in the Victorian Consumer Credit Review...

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/45483/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/45483/1/CCCL-Interest-rate-caps-report-final.pdf

http://www.griffith.edu.au/criminology-law/socio-legal-research-centre/industry-partners-collaborators/the-centre-for-credit-and-consumer-law

Howell, Nicola, Wilson, Therese, & Davidson, James (2008) Interest rate caps : protection or paternalism.

Direitos

Copyright 2008 Centre for Credit and Consumer Law, Griffith University

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Law

Palavras-Chave #180105 Commercial and Contract Law #180119 Law and Society #consumer credit #payday loans #interest rate caps #regulation
Tipo

Report