Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

THE PLUMMET OF PAYDAY LENDERS

Fewer Illinois residents using high-cost consumer loans since interest rate cap

- BY AMY YEE, BUSINESS & ECONOMY REPORTER ayee@suntimes.com | @amyyeewrit­es

During the pandemic, Kesha ThompsonWa­rren took out a high-cost loan to keep her landscapin­g and janitorial services company going. As clients closed their doors, work at her South Holland business, ShadeTree, had dried up.

Thompson-Warren, 42, has accounts with Bank of America but couldn’t get a small business loan there in 2020 nor from other banks and credit unions because she had nearly $100,000 in student-loan debt.

She also couldn’t get a loan from the federal Paycheck Protection Program, the $800 billion program launched in 2020 to provide relief to business owners during the COVID-19 pandemic.

She resorted to taking out a $1,250 auto-title loan from TitleMax that carried a 197.64% yearly interest rate and required signing over the title of her Lincoln. She paid off the loan in January 2021, having paid a total of $4,211.10 in interest and fees.

Thompson-Warren — who still had to lay off half of her 10 employees before business picked up — says she knows others who have taken out similar high-cost loans and struggled with repayment, some of them now being pursued by collection agencies.

“It’s been a difficult road,” says ThompsonWa­rren, a mother of two. “I want to make sure no one else goes through this.”

Far fewer people in Illinois are taking the same route, according to a report from the Woodstock Institute, a research and policy nonprofit in Chicago.

The number of high-cost consumer loans has plummeted since an Illinois law passed in March 2021 capped interest rates at 36%, including all fees.

That year, 17 states and Washington, D.C., also had interest rate caps of 36% or lower.

On Thursday, Michigan’s Senate passed a bill to cap payday loan interest rates at 36%, significan­tly lower than the current average rate of 370%.

Before the passage of the Predatory Loan Prevention Act, the average interest rate for Illinois auto-title loans was 178%, 228% for installmen­t payday loans and 297% for payday loans.

“Giving a person a high-cost loan for a problem is like throwing a brick at a drowning person,” says Brent Adams, senior vice president for the Woodstock Institute, who was a co-author of the report and says predatory loans are part of a financial ecosystem that particular­ly hurts minorities and lowincome people.

In 2019, Illinois consumers paid $607.4 million in interest and fees — fourth-highest in the nation — on more than 1 million payday loans, installmen­t payday loans, auto-title loans and small consumer loans, the Woodstock Institute found. In 2022, a year after

the predatory loan act took effect, borrowers took out 105 of those loans, and the fees totaled $1,279.

“Us small businesses are suffering because we can’t get anything to get our businesses going,” says Thompson-Warren, who started ShadeTree in 2014.

She hopes more banks and other financial institutio­ns would offer small loans to help owners of small businesses, who otherwise sometimes end up turning to higher-interest payday lenders.

Behind the numbers

The Illinois Legislativ­e Black Caucus pushed for the law as part of a package aimed at cutting into the racial wealth gap and socioecono­mic disparitie­s. But the broader effort to curb high-cost loans dates back years.

“There is a growing understand­ing among Illinoisan­s that these financial systems target people of color and entrench racial poverty,” state Sen. Jacqueline Collins, D-Chicago, said when Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed the law.

Historical­ly, Illinois’ minority and lowerincom­e communitie­s took out a disproport­ionate share of high-cost consumer loans.

In 2019, 78% to 89% of high-cost loan borrowers had yearly incomes of $50,000 or less, according to the Illinois Department of Financial and Profession­al Regulation.

Chicago ZIP codes with the highest rate of payday and installmen­t payday loans in 2019 and 2020 included Chatham, Auburn Gresham, Roseland, West Garfield Park, Riverdale as did the south suburbs Dolton, Calumet Park and Blue Island, according to the Woodstock Institute.

In Springfiel­d, more than half of borrowers who lived in areas with minority population­s of more than 20% took out 84% of payday and installmen­t loans.

After the law was passed, it appears that many payday lenders, auto-title lenders and high-cost installmen­t lenders closed, while more affordable installmen­t lenders expanded in Illinois, according to the Woodstock Institute.

A survey it commission­ed found that, rather than take out high-cost loans, more people borrowed from friends, tapped personal savings, waited until their next paycheck or used other means to get by. Of 600 people surveyed, including 400 low-income consumers, 27% said they used a credit card, and 22% dipped into savings.

A ‘cycle of debt’

Alice Ramey, 83, of Springfiel­d, went to a pawnbroker in 2020 after a house fire and car accident saddled her with bills. She took jewelry and antique coins to Monster Pawn in Springfiel­d. In exchange for her heirlooms, Ramey borrowed $2,050 and eventually paid over $2,500 in interest. But she couldn’t recover two of her items.

Most pawn shop loans have one-month terms. Ramey couldn’t pay the loans in full, so she rolled over each of her loans by paying only the interest. She extended the loans more than 20 times.

“I think they’re ripping off seniors and people who need help,” Ramey says.

Unlike payday lenders, the pawn industry isn’t required to share loan data with state regulators. A bill that passed the Illinois General Assembly on March 7 will require pawnbroker­s to start reporting data and prohibit them from making auto-title loans — though they still will be able to charge interest rates of 240% and above on loans of less than $500. The bill is on Pritzker’s desk.

“People understand if interest rates are

“GIVING A PERSON A HIGHCOST LOAN FOR A PROBLEM IS LIKE THROWING A BRICK AT A DROWNING PERSON.”

BRENT ADAMS, senior vice president for Woodstock Institute, who was a co-author of the report

high or not,” says the Woodstock Institute’s Adams. “But they don’t necessaril­y fully understand the implicatio­ns of high-cost loans. People believe they will pay it off quickly, but then they have other commitment­s. They don’t pay, and it gets them into a cycle of debt.”

The predatory loan act initially included pawn loans. But a Sangamon County judge ruled in September 2021 that the law did not apply to them.

“A pawn transactio­n does not and cannot create a cycle of debt,” says Kelly Swisher, president of the Illinois Pawnbroker­s Associatio­n. “Simply put, a pawn is not a loan because there is never an obligation to repay.”

It’s unclear how many former borrowers of high-interest loans were pushed to pawnbroker­s. After Ohio capped interest on payday loans at 28%, that state saw a 97% increase in the number of pawnshops, according to the Woodstock Institute.

Nationally, consumer debt is swelling. Credit card and auto-loan delinquenc­ies are rising, exceeding pre-pandemic levels, according to the New York Federal Reserve Bank.

“The solution for consumers struggling to make ends meet is not more debt,” the Woodstock Institute report says.

It points to other tools, such as cash assistance, “baby bonds,” which are publicly funded child trust accounts, child savings accounts, tax credits, student loan forgivenes­s, free tuition at public universiti­es and reparation­s as ways to improve financial stability.

 ?? ALEX WROBLEWSKI/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Kesha Thompson-Warren, owner of ShadeTree in South Holland, took out a high-cost loan to keep her landscapin­g and janitorial services company going during the pandemic.
ALEX WROBLEWSKI/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Kesha Thompson-Warren, owner of ShadeTree in South Holland, took out a high-cost loan to keep her landscapin­g and janitorial services company going during the pandemic.

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