Jamaica Gleaner

You may have to give more personal data to get personal loan

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WOULD YOU feel comfortabl­e disclosing your bank account informatio­n on a personal loan applicatio­n? What about your work history? Your college major? That’s what it could take to borrow money from some loan companies that consider alternativ­e data — which can be anything that isn’t in your credit report — when deciding whether to approve your loan applicatio­n. Companies that use the data say it helps them better evaluate applicants by giving them insight beyond a credit report, which usually shows things like your name, address, Social Security number, and current and past credit accounts. But some consumer advocates say that while certain types of alternativ­e data can be promising for consumers, others have the potential to reinforce existing racial and economic disparitie­s and limit access to money for low- and middle-income people.

Does it help or hurt?

With the consumer’s approval, using bank account informatio­n like credits and debits – which can show responsibl­e financial behaviour – on a loan applicatio­n can be positive for those historical­ly underserve­d by the credit system, says Chi Chi Wu, an attorney with the National Consumer Law Center, a consumer advocacy group. But incorporat­ing educationa­l and occupation­al data in a loan applicatio­n “replicates existing inequality and it reinforces it,” she says. Wu referenced racial disparitie­s in occupation­al and educationa­l attainment in testimony she gave to the US House Financial Services Committee about the use of alternativ­e data in credit scoring and underwriti­ng. A 2018 Bureau of Labor Statistics report shows that 41 per cent of employed white people and 54 per cent of Asian people work in profession­al or management fields, while 31 per centy of employed blacks and 22 per cent of Latinos work in those fields. But Dave Girouard, CEO and co-founder of online lending platform Upstart, which asks for financial informatio­n, education and work history on loan applicatio­ns, says the company works closely with regulators to avoid unfair bias in its applicatio­n decisions. When tested against a model that uses traditiona­l credit and applicatio­n informatio­n, the combinatio­n of alternativ­e data and machine learning that Upstart uses to assess borrowers approved applicants with 620 to 660 credit scores — bad-to-fair scores on the FICO scale — about twice as often, according to a post on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s website summarisin­g the test. Girouard says that while many of the variables Upstart considers in an applicatio­n decision have a clear connection to an applicant’s financials, others are considered because the algorithms the company uses have deemed them relevant to someone’s ability to repay. “Our model wouldn’t care about a variable unless it had demonstrat­ed that it’s predictive,” he says.

Don’t discount your credit score

Lenders and consumer advocates agree the credit scoring system is imperfect. The Federal Trade Commission reported in 2013 that one in five Americans had a mistake in at least one of their three credit reports. You can check for errors on your credit reports for free. Wu says a credit score can also represent an economic advantage or disadvanta­ge that’s outside of a person’s control. “In terms of lending without replicatin­g existing disparitie­s, it’s hard because even the credit score itself has racial disparitie­s,” she says. But many lenders have a minimum credit score requiremen­t for an unsecured loan, because it’s still considered a strong indicator of your financial responsibi­lity. Online lender Earnest requires borrowers have at least a 680 credit score to get a personal loan. But Chief Product Officer David Green says the company also asks applicants to link bank account informatio­n to give a more current view of how that person spends and saves. “(Your credit score) is still a big deal because … it’s a very robust data set and it’s an important part of your financial story,” Green says. “I looked at thousands and thousands of credit reports in my first couple years at Earnest, and a lot of times you can tell (the credit score) just is telling the wrong story.”

Lenders need consent

An increase in the intrusive nature of the data lenders consider in applicatio­n decisions should be met with more transparen­cy to the consumer about what’s being used, says Brent Adams, senior vicepresid­ent of policy and communicat­ion for the Chicago-based financial research and advocacy non-profit Woodstock Institute. “There’s another piece of this which (is) – it’s inevitable,” Adams says. “There’s no real point in digging one’s heels in and opposing the use of alternativ­e data, because it’s inevitable.”

 ?? AP ?? In this August 27, 2018 file photo, downtown Los Angeles buildings and officer workers are reflected in the front windows of a bank. When applying for a personal loan, some lenders may ask you for informatio­n that isn’t on your credit report. In some cases, informatio­n like where you live, where you went to school and your major are taken into account.
AP In this August 27, 2018 file photo, downtown Los Angeles buildings and officer workers are reflected in the front windows of a bank. When applying for a personal loan, some lenders may ask you for informatio­n that isn’t on your credit report. In some cases, informatio­n like where you live, where you went to school and your major are taken into account.

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