Inequality in high-cost borrowing and unemployment insurance generosity in US states during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Inequality in high-cost borrowing and unemployment insurance generosity in US states during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Publication date: Jul 11, 2024

US consumers may turn to the private market for credit when income and government benefits fall short. The most vulnerable consumers have access only to the highest-cost loans. Prior research on trade-offs of credit with government welfare support cannot distinguish between distinct forms of unsecured credit due to data limitations. Here we provide insight on credit-welfare state trade-offs vis-cE0-vis unemployment insurance generosity by leveraging a large sample of credit data that allow us to separate credit cards, personal loans and alternative financial services loans and to analyse heterogeneity in credit use by household income. We find that more generous state unemployment insurance benefits were associated with a lower probability of high-cost credit use during the first seven quarters of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This inverse association was concentrated among consumers living in low-income households. Our results support theories that public benefits are inversely associated with the use of costly credit.

Concepts Keywords
Coronavirus Benefits
Covid Consumers
Generosity Cost
Loans Covid
Unemployment Credit
Generosity
Government
High
Income
Insurance
Loans
Offs
Pandemic
Trade
Unemployment

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH unemployment
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic

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