No Slack: The Financial Lives of Low-income Americans

Voorkant
Brookings Institution Press, 2012 - 294 pagina's

The financial crisis exposed the potentially unsavory results of the interaction between low- and moderate income households and alternative and mainstream financial institutions. Many households were overleveraged or paid high costs for financial services, while others lacked access to useful financial products that can cushion against economic instability. The financial services system is not well designed to serve low- and moderate-income households, leaving them without financial slack: they did not have adequate breathing room for making the financial adjustments that would permit them to better meet their own needs. No Slack shows us why these families were the least prepared to handle the shock of the deep recession.

This pivotal analysis focuses on the Detroit metropolitan area's low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, which are similar to those of other Rust Belt communities. The Detroit Area Household Financial Services study--conducted at the height of the subprime lending boom--examines these households' decisionmaking processes, behaviors, and attitudes toward a full range of financial transactions.

No Slack reveals widespread problems in home mortgage lending, the common threads among people who file for bankruptcy, the reasons so many households are unbanked, and how behaviorally informed financial regulation can make the market work better. Drawing on his deep policy experience, Michael Barr advocates helping families seek financial stability in three primary ways: enhancing individuals' financial capability, using technology to promote access to financial products and services that meet their needs, and establishing strong protections for consumers.

 

Inhoudsopgave

Introduction
1
Managing Money
22
And Banking for All?
54
Preferences for Plastic
83
Which Way to the Bank?
115
Borrowing to Make Ends Meet
133
HighCost Home Ownership
156
Living on the Edge of Bankruptcy
179
Paying to Save
218
Behaviorally Informed Regulation
246
Crisis and Reform
279
About the Authors
287
Index
289
Back Flap
295
Back Cover
296
Copyright

Expensive Tax Refunds
204

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Over de auteur (2012)

Michael S. Barr, a former assistant Treasury secretary for financial institutions, is aprofessor at the University of Michigan Law School and a nonresident senior fellowin Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution. Among his recent publications are Insufficient Funds: Savings, Assets, Credit and Banking among Low- and Moderate-Income Households, co-edited with Rebecca M. Blank (Russell Sage, 2009) and BuildingInclusive Financial Systems: A Framework for Financial Access, co-edited with AnjaliKumar and Robert E. Litan (Brookings, 2007).

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