Guest Post: Cognitive Dissonance and APR Caps Gallery Guest Post: Cognitive Dissonance and APR Caps Guest Post, News Guest Post: Cognitive Dissonance and APR Caps By Andrew Morrison, Sun Loan Company There was an [...] moderator 2021-06-14T18:44:05+00:00 July 28th, 2020|Categories: Guest Post, News|Tags: Annual Percentage Rates, APR, cognitive dissonance, Consumer Finance, Financial Health Network, installment lending, legislation, NILA, pandemic, Pew Charitable Trusts, price caps, psychology, regulation, small dollar lending, Sun Loan Company, The Atlantic|Comments Off on Guest Post: Cognitive Dissonance and APR Caps Read More
STUDY REVIEW: How Do Small-Dollar Nonbank Loans Work? Gallery STUDY REVIEW: How Do Small-Dollar Nonbank Loans Work? News, Regulation, Study Review STUDY REVIEW: How Do Small-Dollar Nonbank Loans Work? In the first of a series of posts reviewing [...] moderator 2020-06-16T17:58:24+00:00 June 16th, 2020|Categories: News, Regulation, Study Review|Tags: access to credit, Annual Percentage Rate, APR, APR Caps, financial inclusion, financial regulation, George Mason University, installment lending, Mercatus Center, NILA, price caps, regulation, small dollar credit, Thomas W. Miller, traditional installment loans|Comments Off on STUDY REVIEW: How Do Small-Dollar Nonbank Loans Work? Read More