The Future of High-Cost Credit: Rethinking Payday Lending: Hart Studies in Commercial and Financial Law
Autor Dr Jodi Gardneren Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 ian 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781509961429
ISBN-10: 1509961429
Pagini: 266
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Seria Hart Studies in Commercial and Financial Law
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1509961429
Pagini: 266
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Seria Hart Studies in Commercial and Financial Law
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Introduces a new categorisation of borrowers based on detailed empirical research of the lending market
Notă biografică
Jodi Gardner is Fellow of Law at St John's College, University of Cambridge, UK.
Cuprins
1. Introduction 1.1. Payday Problems 1.2. Why High-Cost Credit? 1.3. Method, Scope and Jurisdiction 1.4. Outline PART IPHILOSOPHICAL CONTEXT: THE CONCEPTS OF HIGH-COST CREDIT2. High-Cost Credit in the UK 2.1. How is High-Cost Credit Regulated? 2.1.1. The History of Moneylending Regulation 2.1.2. The Office of Fair Trading 2.1.3. The Financial Conduct Authority 2.1.4. Non-Regulatory Legal Enforcement 2.1.5. What Can We Learn? 2.2. What are the Challenges to Regulation?2.2.1. Victim Blaming 2.2.2. Inadequate Engagement with the Market 2.2.3. What Can We Do? 2.3. Conclusion 3. Freedom 3.1. What is Freedom? 3.2. The History of Freedom 3.3. Justifying Freedom 3.3.1. Consent 3.3.2. Human Rights Approaches 3.3.3. Responsibilisation and Financialisation3.3.4. Differing Approaches to Financial and Physical Products 3.4. Examples of Freedom 3.4.1. Restrictions on Who Can Lend 3.4.2. Disclosure Obligations and Advertising Restrictions 3.4.3. Cooling-Off Rights3.4.4. Unfair Relationship Test 3.4.5. Vitiating Factors 3.5. Limitations of Freedom 3.5.1. Failure of Disclosure 3.5.2. Lack of Meaningful Choice 3.5.3. Poverty 3.6. Conclusion 4. Regulation 4.1. What is Regulation? 4.2. The History of Regulation 4.2.1. Usury, Religion and High-Cost Credit 4.2.2. The Development of Regulation 4.2.3. What Can We Learn? 4.3. Explanations for Regulation 4.3.1. Preventing Harmful Outcomes 4.3.2. Stopping Unconscionable Behaviour 4.3.3. Defending the Vulnerable 4.4. Examples of Regulation 4.4.1. Amending or Prohibiting Contract Terms 4.4.2. Prohibiting or Limiting Interest 4.4.3. Responsible Lending Obligations 4.4.4. Unfair Terms Legislation 4.4.5. Common Law Protections 4.5. Limitations of Regulation 4.5.1. Overlap with Limitations of Freedom 4.5.2. Illegal Lending 4.5.3. Financial Exclusion 4.6. Conclusion 5. A Social Minimum 5.1. What is a Social Minimum? 5.2. The History of A Social Minimum 5.2.1. Religious and Charitable Obligations 5.2.2. The Poor Laws 5.2.3. The Beveridge Report 5.2.4. After the 'Welfare State' 5.3. Explanations for a Social Minimum 5.3.1. Equality and Liberal Democracy 5.3.2. Government Duty 5.3.3. Social Minimum and Happiness 5.4. Examples of a Social Minimum Provision 5.4.1. Welfare Provision 5.4.2. Bankruptcy Relief 5.4.3. Vitiating Factors 5.5. Limitations of a Social Minimum 5.5.1. Impact on Property Rights 5.5.2. Responsibility for the Social Minimum 5.5.3. Moral Hazards 5.6. Conclusion PART IITHE SOCIAL CONTEXT: IDENTIFYING HIGH-COST CREDIT BORROWERS6. The Lived Experience 6.1. Research Method and Results 6.1.1. Methodology of Stakeholder Interviews 6.1.2. Methodology of Borrower Interviews 6.1.3. Interview Results 6.2. Financially Secure Borrowers 6.2.1. Lending Scenarios 6.2.2. Application to High-Cost Credit Concepts 6.2.3. Application to Current Legal Approach 6.3. Financially Insecure Borrowers 6.3.1. Lending Scenarios 6.3.2. Application to High-Cost Credit Concepts 6.3.3. Application to Current Legal Approach 6.4. Significantly Impaired Borrowers 6.4.1. Lending Scenarios 6.4.2. Application to High-Cost Credit Concepts 6.4.3. Application to Current Legal Approach 6.5. Conclusion 7. Future Directions 7.1. Law Reform Recommendations 7.1.1. Enhanced and Meaningful Disclosure 7.1.2. Responsible Lending Obligations 7.1.3. Opt Out Processes 7.2. Social Welfare Responses 7.2.1. Providing a Social Minimum 7.2.2. Maintaining a Social Minimum 7.3. Further Research 8. Conclusion
Recenzii
In a world of increasingly insecure work and runaway inflation, the regulation of payday loans is a central policy priority. The challenge is complex, requiring a broad, interdisciplinary understanding not only of current legal regimes, but also their history, political economy, and lived reality. In this pathbreaking book, Dr Jodi Gardner brilliantly draws on these perspectives to provide urgently required directions for reform.
This theoretically and empirically rich analysis of high-cost credit provides a clear argument for both regulatory and broader welfare approaches to tackle the problems it causes. As such, this book deserves to be widely read by lawyers and social scientists alike.
Jodi Gardner's The Future of High-Cost Credit blends philosophical, politico-economic and socio-legal analysis to make a sophisticated and important contribution to the debate on regulation of high-cost credit.
Jodi Gardner's book, The Future of High-Cost Credit, .... steps across the freedom versus regulation dichotomy that typically characterises debate around high cost credit. Taking a clear eyed view of the issues at hand, the book also addresses the often neglected policy debate relevant to the harms arising from consumer reliance on high cost credit ... The Future of High Cost Credit is valuable, and indeed crucial, reading for those interested in contract theory, credit and banking law, financial regulation and social justice.
Gardner provides a deft exploration of high-cost credit, or 'payday' loans, in the UK - not shying away from complexity and debate. She lays bare the business models which can keep borrowers trapped in an exploitative and expensive cycle of credit, the insufficiencies of the existing regulatory approaches to tame the market, and why the problem will persist as poverty rates soar in the UK. This book is a devastating indictment of the system around high-cost credit.
This theoretically and empirically rich analysis of high-cost credit provides a clear argument for both regulatory and broader welfare approaches to tackle the problems it causes. As such, this book deserves to be widely read by lawyers and social scientists alike.
Jodi Gardner's The Future of High-Cost Credit blends philosophical, politico-economic and socio-legal analysis to make a sophisticated and important contribution to the debate on regulation of high-cost credit.
Jodi Gardner's book, The Future of High-Cost Credit, .... steps across the freedom versus regulation dichotomy that typically characterises debate around high cost credit. Taking a clear eyed view of the issues at hand, the book also addresses the often neglected policy debate relevant to the harms arising from consumer reliance on high cost credit ... The Future of High Cost Credit is valuable, and indeed crucial, reading for those interested in contract theory, credit and banking law, financial regulation and social justice.
Gardner provides a deft exploration of high-cost credit, or 'payday' loans, in the UK - not shying away from complexity and debate. She lays bare the business models which can keep borrowers trapped in an exploitative and expensive cycle of credit, the insufficiencies of the existing regulatory approaches to tame the market, and why the problem will persist as poverty rates soar in the UK. This book is a devastating indictment of the system around high-cost credit.