Not exact matches
The Case for Banning Payday Lending: Snapshots from Four Key States (June 2013) This report outlines the battles against the payday lending industry in states with strong
usury cap protections, such as New York and North Carolina, and in states like California and Illinois with weaker
laws that allow payday lenders to charge triple - digit APR loans that trap people in a cycle of debt.
New York sued along with several other states with strict
usury laws that
cap interest rates.
Even in states where interest rates are
capped by
usury laws, late fees or NSF fees ratchet up the balance.
Rigbi's paper, «The Effects of
Usury Laws: Evidence from the Online Loan Market,» exploits a change in the lending rules that apply to Prosper.com to examine the effects of interest rate
caps.
That's because these are the states that have either weak or no «
usury laws» meaning there is no
cap on the interest rate that is charged.
Similarly, as mentioned above, funders structure their agreements to avoid classification as loans in order to avoid the
caps that
usury laws place on interest rates for mortgages and credit cards.