Santa Fe New Mexican

High-interest loans have a purpose

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Politician­s often claim to be helping “the poor” with the policies they enact. But people with the resources to take extended time away from their work and spend months in committee hearings are inherently not “representa­tive” of the people of New Mexico. They need to be reminded that most people live paycheck to paycheck and struggle to manage an expense from time to time — more so than New Mexico’s 112 legislator­s and governor.

People of means generally have equity in their homes or can access government-subsidized loans for college. They would not find loans with interest rates in excess of 36 percent to be attractive, but the reality is that most Americans (and an even higher proportion of New Mexicans) lack $400 in accessible savings. Whether facing a car breakdown or another unexpected expense, working people deserve access to quality credit regardless of income or credit history.

What alternativ­es do the 42 percent of consumers with nonprime credit scores have? If a borrower does not have collateral, their borrowing options are constraine­d as the risk of lending them money rises.

Passing a 36 percent interest rate cap in New Mexico amounts to the Legislatur­e telling predominan­tly poor, working-class minorities they are incapable of making their own financial decisions. Who is to say whether it is better for a borrower to take out a regulated loan to meet a short-term need rather than suffering late payments that often result in fees equal to 100 percent of the bill amount, bounced checks, or other forms of lending that result in aggressive collection­s practices and can lead to the loss of homes or cars?

New Mexico has the third-highest rate of car repossessi­ons in the country. If a borrower falls behind on payments, a creditor may repossess his or her car at any time without the borrower’s consent. A repossessi­on can remain on a borrower’s credit score for at least seven years, damaging credit and making it even more challengin­g to access financial options down the road.

If small loans at lower interest rates were available without putting one’s car down as collateral, wouldn’t people in need of short-term cash be using those already?

Few banks offer personal loans and credit union loans designed for nonprime consumers, called “payday alternativ­e loans,” represent less than 1 percent of the 100 million Americans who make up the nonprime consumer market.

Other lenders have claimed that they can fill the gap created by regulation­s like those being pushed in Senate Bill 66 this session — a claim which hasn’t proved true in other states. Most traditiona­l lenders simply will not or cannot make these loans to borrowers with lower credit scores. In a letter to the U.S. Department of the Treasury last September, a small lender industry group wrote: “Small dollar loans can be challengin­g for CDFIs (traditiona­l lenders) to make work under their business model. The loans take the same or more resources to underwrite, manage, and provide technical assistance for as larger loans with a much narrower margin. Additional­ly, losses and defaults for these types of loans can be much higher than typical loans.”

It’s easy to sit in your house with electricit­y and heat with a functionin­g car to take you to your place of work in the morning and pass judgment on people of lesser means who have been shut out by mainstream lenders. Given the events of the past year and the negative impact lockdowns have had, especially on low-wage workers, it would seem that the Legislatur­e should have higher priorities than eliminatin­g needed financial options for working people.

The Legislatur­e should refrain from further restrictin­g the ability of New Mexicans from accessing credit of their choosing when emergencie­s arise and pushing them to worse outcomes.

Paul Gessing is president of New Mexico’s Rio Grande Foundation. The Rio Grande Foundation is an independen­t, nonpartisa­n, tax-exempt research and educationa­l organizati­on dedicated to promoting prosperity for New Mexico based on principles of limited government, economic freedom and individual responsibi­lity

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