In America, the psychology and boom-bust cycle around every form of credit is really influenced by inequality.
Step 1: Create cashflow problems for poor people by delaying pay, but frontloading unexpected expenses (healthcare, education, repairing a broken car that gets you to work), making alternatives incredibly overpriced (renting vs owning a home), and adding extra fees for late payments overdrafts and similar. ("Being poor sure is expensive." [1])
Step 2: Expand access to credit in the name of equality. Sub-prime and aggressive lending products help people who are living inefficiently make better choices like buying a house, taking that job in the next town, getting a degree etc etc!
Step 3: New markets always mean (a) bigger interest rates being promised upfront, (b) borrowers who are less experienced with credit and (c) lenders who don't really know the nature of risks in he new market. This is a huge opportunity for middlemen to create products that are exploitative to the borrower (sandwich financing), to the lender (CDOs full of NINJA mortgages), or both -- so folks show up to do just that.
Step 1: Create cashflow problems for poor people by delaying pay, but frontloading unexpected expenses (healthcare, education, repairing a broken car that gets you to work), making alternatives incredibly overpriced (renting vs owning a home), and adding extra fees for late payments overdrafts and similar. ("Being poor sure is expensive." [1])
Step 2: Expand access to credit in the name of equality. Sub-prime and aggressive lending products help people who are living inefficiently make better choices like buying a house, taking that job in the next town, getting a degree etc etc!
Step 3: New markets always mean (a) bigger interest rates being promised upfront, (b) borrowers who are less experienced with credit and (c) lenders who don't really know the nature of risks in he new market. This is a huge opportunity for middlemen to create products that are exploitative to the borrower (sandwich financing), to the lender (CDOs full of NINJA mortgages), or both -- so folks show up to do just that.
[1] https://finmasters.com/cost-of-being-poor/#gref