Authors

Past Contributors

« Sliding into the Great Deflation | Main | The Fed Cannot Do it All »

Credit Card Application Approval Processes

posted by Adam Levitin

An enterprising individual decided to test whether he could get a card using a torn-up application that he taped together and then filed out with a new (unverified) address and phone number.  He ended up with a shiny new Chase Mastercard sent to the new address.  (This story is a couple years old, but I just saw it today.)  If this doesn't make you go out and buy one of those fancy super-duper cross-cutting Ollie North/Arthur Andersen-endorsed shredders, I'm not sure what will.  And we wonder why identity theft is a problem...   

Put that together with the latest story of a dog getting a credit card, and you've got to ask whether credit card lending has become like NINJA loans in the mortgage market--does the lender really care about whether the borrower can or will repay?   What's going on here?  Has securitization created a moral hazard for the card industry?  It's surely less than in the mortgage industry because card issuers carry much more of the debt themselves than say a mortgage bank.  Or are fraud costs so low that it isn't worth the cost it would take to fix them?  Or is something else going on? 

I have trouble believing that this is just a couple of isolated errors or the result of a bad apple.  There are just too many examples of minors and pets getting "pre-approved" card applications.  Or as Alan Greenspan put it a few years back "Children, dogs, cats, and moose are getting credit cards."  Thoughts?  Comments are open. 

Comments

Credit cards are too easy to obtain. Maybe we should go backward about 40 years and return to creditworthiness and not instant credit. In the interim, all those pre-approved credit card mailings make great shred for the barbecue.

The comments to this entry are closed.

Google Search

  • Google

    search the Internet
    search Credit Slips

Bankr-L

  • As a public service, the University of Illinois College of Law operates Bankr-L, an e-mail list on which bankruptcy professionals can exchange information. Bankr-L is administered by one of the Credit Slips bloggers, Professor Robert M. Lawless of the University of Illinois. Although Bankr-L is a free service, membership is limited only to persons with a professional connection to the bankruptcy field (e.g., lawyer, accountant, academic, judge). To request a subscription on Bankr-L, click on this link and then click on the button for "Join or leave the list." After completing the information there, please also send an e-mail to Professor Lawless (rlawless-at-law-dot-uiuc-dot-edu) with a short description of your professional connection to bankruptcy. A link to a URL with a professional bio or other identifying information would be great.

OTHER STUFF

Powered by TypePad