The Washington Post has two articles today about regulation (or lack of regulation) of sharing services like Uber and Airbnb. In an article entitled "Uber might actually want regulation. Here’s why," the Post reports: Though they are loath to admit it, ridesharing outfits like Uber and Lyft have profited in no small part from dodging […]
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When Congress, as part of a government-funding deal during the lame-duck session in 2014, repealed a key provision of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform bill, it removed an important protection against the consolidation of power in too-big-to-fail financial entities. What, precisely, did it do? Professor Mark Roe of Harvard Law (who, incidentally, taught my […]
Today, major credit rating agency Standard and Poor's agreed to pay almost $1.4 billion to settle a suit filed by the Justice Department accusing the agency of giving inaccurately high credit ratings for risky financial products in the lead-up to the 2008 financial crisis. Read more about it here. You can also read a DOJ […]
To quote the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's press release: [T]he Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the U.S. Department of Education announced more than $480 million in forgiveness for borrowers who took out Corinthian College’s high-cost private student loans. ECMC Group, the new owner of a number of Corinthian schools, will not operate a private student […]
The New York Times reports today: The New York State attorney general’s office accused four major retailers on Monday of selling fraudulent and potentially dangerous herbal supplements and demanded that they remove the products from their shelves. The authorities said they had conducted tests on top-selling store brands of herbal supplements at four national retailers […]
by Jeff Sovern In their book, More Than You Wanted to Know: The Failure of Mandated Disclosure, Omri Ben-Shahar & Carl E. Schneider mention the "Spanish Requirement," a rule that obliged sixteenth century Spaniards to deliver a speech in Spanish demanding surrender from New World audiences that did not understand Spanish. My research assistant, Eric Levine, dug […]
"Troubled by consumer complaints and loopholes in state laws, federal regulators are putting together the first rules on payday loans aimed at helping cash-strapped borrowers avoid falling into a cycle of high-rate debt," the New York Times reports this morning. Read "Rules Are Coming on Payday Loans to Shield Borrowers," here.
car title loans are marketed as small emergency loans, but in reality these loans trap borrowers in a cycle of debt. A typical car title loan has a triple-digit annual interest rate, requires repayment within one month, and is made for much less than the value of the car. – See more at: http://www.responsiblelending.org/other-consumer-loans/car-title-loans/tools-resources/what-are-car-title-loans.html#sthash.iYj0Yw6y.dpuf car […]
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has this on-line interactive tool for estimating what a consumer should pay for a home mortgage. Plug in loan type, amount, length, down payment, FICO credit score, location, etc., and the tool spits out the approximate market interest rate in the relevant location and the total cost of credit. The […]
We blogged last year about courts that send people to jail for their inability to pay their court debts. Yesterday the ACLU sued DeKalb County, Ga., over this unconstitutional practice, undertaken in partnership with a private debt collection company. According to their press release, the ACLU charges that "DeKalb County and for-profit Judicial Correction Services […]

