Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5096321 Journal of Econometrics 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
The existing literature on payday loans has primarily focused on estimating causal effects of access to those loans, including work by Morse (2011), Skiba and Tobacman (2009) and Melzer (2011). Using individual-level administrative records on borrowers in 38 states from an online payday lender, this paper departs from past work by estimating how payday loan regulation affects borrower behavior, specifically how much they choose to borrow, how many times they choose to renew the loan, and whether or not they choose to default. State-level variation in maximum loan sizes and renewal caps are used as exclusion restrictions for identification purposes. We pay particular attention to the calculation of posterior predictive distributions that summarize the sensitivities of borrower behavior to various changes in state-level policies.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Statistics and Probability
Authors
, , ,