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Administrative data

Foreclosure's Wake: The Credit Experiences of Individuals Following Foreclosure

Submitted by Admin on
Abstract: While a substantial literature has examined the causes of mortgage foreclosure, there has been relatively little work on the consequences of foreclosure for the borrowers themselves. Using a large sample of anonymous credit bureau records, observed quarterly from 1999Q1 through 2010Q1, we examine the credit experiences of almost 350,000 borrowers before and after their mortgage foreclosure.

The Impact of Financial Advice on Retirement Planning and Outcomes

Submitted by Admin on
We study retirement savings decisions and outcomes in Oregon University System’s Optional Retirement Plan (ORP). During our sample period, 32% of ORP participants choose to invest through HIGH, which markets itself as providing personal face-to-face financial service. The other participants choose to invest through three lower-service providers, with 51% investing through LOW. Consistent with lower levels of financial literacy driving demand for financial advisors, we find that younger, less highly educated, and less highly paid employees are more likely to invest through HIGH.

Mortgage Contract Choice in Subprime Mortgage Markets

Submitted by Admin on
Abstract: The boom in the subprime mortgage market yielded many loans with high LTV ratios. From a large proprietary database on subprime mortgages, we find that choice of mortgage rate type is not linear in loan sizes. A fixed rate mortgage contract is a popular choice when loan size, measured by LTV ratio, is small. As LTV ratio increases, borrowers become more likely to choose adjustable rate mortgage contracts. However, when LTV reaches a certain level, borrowers start to switch back to fixed rate contracts. For these high LTV loans, fixed rate mortgages dominate borrowers' choices.

Evaluating Workplace Education for New Hires

Submitted by Admin on
This project examines how employer-provided financial education for newly hired workers affects participation in retirement savings plans. The investigators partnered with six large employers to explore what financial education is currently offered to new hires. Each employer provided individual data on workers hired in 2008 and 2009. This report assesses the impact of information and delivery methods on participation and contribution rates. Several findings emerge. There is strong evidence that employees respond to match incentives.

Who Gains and Who Loses from Credit Card Payments: Theory and Calibrations

Submitted by Admin on
Merchant fees and reward programs generate an implicit monetary transfer to credit card users from non-card (or “cash”) users because merchants generally do not set differential prices for card users to recoup the costs of fees and rewards. On average, each cash-using household pays $149 to card-using households and each card-using household receives $1,133 from cash users every year. Because credit card spending and rewards are positively correlated with household income, the payment instrument transfer also induces a regressive transfer from low-income to high-income households in general.

Characteristics of Users of Refund Anticipation Loans and Refund Anticipation Checks

Submitted by Admin on
This report addresses two sets of research questions related to Refund anticipation loans (RALs) and refund atnticipation checks (RACs) First, the authors ask who obtains them and who does not and what demographic, economic, and geographic factors are associated with the use of these products. The authors provide descriptive breakdowns of many individual and geographical characteristics that are linked with use of RALs/RACs, and then conduct quantitative analysis of IRS-provided data on millions of tax filers who received a refund in tax year 2008.

Minnesota’s Earned Income Credit Program: Utilization by Current and Former Welfare Households and the Impact of Policy Parameters

Submitted by Admin on
Abstract: This report examines the utilization of a state earned income credit by current and former welfare recipients using two measures: receipt among all current and former welfare recipients and among only those eligible for the credit. Both measures may be useful, depending upon which groups policymakers hope to target.

Credit Card Redlining Revisited

Submitted by Admin on
Abstract: Using a proprietary dataset of credit bureau records, Cohen-Cole (2008) finds that banks set credit limits on revolving accounts based in part on the racial composition of the neighborhood in which each borrower resides. This paper evaluates the evidence presented in that working paper using the same proprietary database of credit bureau records.

Reversing the Trend: The Recent Expansion of the Reverse Mortgage Market

Submitted by Admin on
Abstract: Reverse mortgages allow elderly homeowners to tap into their housing wealth without having to sell or move out of their homes. However, very few eligible homeowners have used reverse mortgages to achieve consumption smoothing until recently when the reverse mortgage market in the United States witnessed substantial growth. This paper examines 1989-2007 loan-level reverse mortgage data and presents a number of findings. First, I show that recent reverse mortgage borrowers are significantly different from earlier borrowers in many respects.

401(k) Plans: Policy Changes Could Reduce the Long-term Effects of Leakage on Workers' Retirement Savings

Submitted by Admin on
Under federal regulations, 401(k) participants may tap into their accrued retirement savings before retirement under certain circumstances, including hardship. This "leakage" from 401(k) accounts can result in a permanent loss of retirement savings.