Abstract :
By focusing on observable default risk’s role in loan terms and the subsequent consequences for
household behavior, this paper shows that lenders increasingly used risk-based pricing of interest
rates in consumer loan markets during the mid-1990s. It tests three resulting predictions: First, the
premium paid per unit of risk should have increased over this period. Second, debt levels should have
reacted accordingly. Third, fewer high-risk households should have been denied credit, further
contributing to the interest rate spread between the highest- and lowest-risk borrowers.
For people obtaining loans, the premium paid per unit of risk did indeed become significantly
larger after the mid-1990s. For example, for a 0.01 increase in the probability of bankruptcy, the
corresponding interest-rate increase tripled for first mortgages, doubled for automobile loans and
rose nearly six-fold for second mortgages. Additionally, changes in borrowing levels and debt access
reflected these new pricing practices, particularly for secured debt. Borrowing increased most for the
low-risk households who saw their relative borrowing costs fall. Furthermore, while very high-risk
households gained expanded access to credit, the increases in their risk premiums implied that their
borrowing as a whole either rose less or, sometimes, fell.
r 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
Borrowing , Debt , Interest rates , Banking , Consumer credit , Consumption