Werewolf: License to prey
How Government could stop Loan-Sharking… But won't
Werewolf.co.nz December IssueOriginal Article
Let’s make 2010 the year that New Zealand stamps out loan sharks. The Government and the community working together have the power to do this, using a range of strategies. And what’s more – it would not actually be that difficult to do.
I believe that just two steps hold the key to success. The first would be for the Government to make credit available at low interest rates and with minimal fees to low income borrowers through Kiwibank. Borrowers would still pay interest so that the loans could be done on a commercial basis, but providing access to credit at reasonable rates would immediately remove people from the grasp of unscrupulous lenders.
The second move would be for the Government to set up car yards to sell secondhand vehicles at reasonable prices. The cars would be checked to ensure that they were roadworthy and had a reasonable amount of life left in them.
Week after week and month after month for a decade now. I have dealt with people who have bought secondhand cars, only to have them break down completely within days. They are then left with bills for tens of thousands of dollars – since the loan has to be repaid to the finance company regardless of the car’s performance – and no vehicles.
There is no need for any further
research about the damaging impact of unscrupulous lenders
on the most vulnerable members of the community.
The 2007
report Pacific Consumers’ Behaviour and Experience in
Credit Markets with Particular Reference to the “Fringe
Lender” Market set out clearly the harm being done by
lack of access to credit at reasonable interest
rates.
The research found that 42 per cent of the
respondents had household incomes of under $15,000, while 22
per cent had incomes of between $16,000 and $30,000, and
only 11 per cent had incomes over $45,000.
Only 43 per
cent were in paid employment.
The study said that the most common reason for borrowing was to pay for household bills. The second most common cause of indebtedness to fringe lenders was borrowing to buy a car. The individual cases cited in the study explain just how hard it is for people from different ethnic groups, or with English as a second language, to deal with banks and other top tier lenders.
A
young Niuean man said that he had wanted to borrow from a
bank but his application was not “good enough,” so he
went to a fringe lender.
A Samoan mechanic said that
banks’ processes and procedures were too strict and
prevented many Pacific peoples from accessing bank
loans.
Other respondents said that –
“At the banks,
I want to have access to the manager but most of the times
the junior staff at reception don’t look at people like
myself favourably, so that’s another disincentive for me
to go the banks,” and
“Another reason some of our
people don’t go to the banks for loans is that bank staff
are always formally dressed up in suits so people see them
as very important people and their status is perceived as
higher than those of potential borrowers, that is another
disincentive and reason why some Pacific people wouldn’t
approach banks for loans.”
Fringe lenders, by contrast, hook
borrowers in by being extremely accessible, providing cash
within 30 minutes, and understanding the Pacific approach to
life. The research reveals that the most common single item
financed through fringe lenders is motor vehicles.
This
comes as no surprise. It is almost impossible to manage in
Auckland without a car, particularly for families with
children. People on low incomes are more likely than
well-off people to have health problems, necessitating
frequent hospital and doctors’ visits for themselves and
their children.
A car is vital in such cases.
However, large numbers of low income people buying cars are being ripped off in two ways. They are charged very high prices for vehicles worth only a fraction of what the purchaser has paid. On top of that, the car is financed by a loan with a high interest rate and excessive loan fees.
I have dealt with many cases in which people have been charged $15,000 or $20,000 for cars which are worth perhaps only $5000 or $6000. The vehicles sometimes run for only a day, a week or a month before breaking down and requiring expensive repairs.
Sometimes the car stops going altogether, and the family is left with no car and a debt which may be $15,000 to $30,000 or even more. The same was found by the report, which gave examples such as a man who borrowed $9000 to buy a car and thought that he would repay a total of $11,000 when interest and fees were added in, but found that his total bill was in fact $21,000.
In another case a Samoan
man bought a car for $10,000, but faced total repayments of
$25,000. A third respondent discovered that a car worth only
about $5000 was to cost her $29,000. The research also found
that fringe lenders were concentrated in lower income
communities, particularly in South Auckland. The report
recorded 38 per cent as the most-commonly mentioned
interest rate during the research.
This is a truly
staggering sum.
The Ministry of Consumer Affairs on 29 May 2009 provided a further report on fringe lending, this time to the Maori Affairs Committee. That paper also gave details of the practices of fringe lenders, such as a finance company lending $4800 to a client secured with around $20,000 of tapa mats of high cultural and emotional importance. Another company secured a cash loan of $2600 against the borrower’s home.
Here is my ten point plan for ridding New Zealand of loan sharks –
1. Cap interest rates. The interest rates lenders can charge should be specified by law and it should be an offence to charge more than that rate. Maximum interest rates could be pegged to the official cash rate, inflation rate or bank interest rates and periodically reviewed. This single step would end most of the rip-offs immediately because it is the huge – and compounding – interest rates which low income borrowers pay that cost them the most.
2. Cap loan fees. Consumer law requires loan fees to be reasonable and related to the costs incurred in preparing loan documents. Moroever, loan contracts nowadays are speedily prepared using precedents and with a few strokes on a keyboard. There is no reason why uniform fee rates cannot be set to prevent unscrupulous lenders from claiming inflated costs.
3. Make low interest loans available through
KiwiBank Borrowers could still pay interest and the
lender could still earn a profit, but the interest rate
would not be excessive.
4. Further simplify loan documents. Credit law changes in 2005 were supposed to make contracts easier for borrowers to understand, but they are still complex and contain many pages of small print. Many borrowers have no idea of how much they will pay over the life of the loan – they only understand their weekly repayment amounts. The front page of the loan document should contain nothing other than the following statement in large, bold type “YOU WILL PAY A TOTAL OF $X IF YOU TAKE OUT THIS LOAN.”
5. Introduce strict controls on insurance relating to loans. People are commonly talked into taking out loan repayment insurance covering risks which do not apply to them. An example of this is beneficiaries being signed up to insurance contracts covering them for loss of a job.
6. Mandatory legal advice. Make it mandatory for borrowers to receive legal advice before signing loan contracts.
7. Change the law relating to cooling-off periods. Borrowers can cancel loan contracts within three working days of borrowing money. However, if debtors have taken possession of goods – such as cars – they cannot cancel the car purchase contract. This means that, even if borrowers belatedly understand that they have been ripped off in their loan contracts, they cannot cancel them because they still have to pay for the vehicle or other goods and cannot get money elsewhere.
8. Involve the Ministry. The Ministry of Consumer Affairs should be charged with taking cases on behalf of individual consumers to enforce credit laws. The Commerce Commission has responsibility for monitoring and enforcing the legislation, but does not act for individuals. The ministry could do that.
9. Plug the gap in the law regarding early repayment fees. The 2005 act was supposed to prevent lenders from charging excessive loan repayment fees, but the first test case produced a disappointing outcome in the District Court.
10. Establish government-run car yards which sell reliable secondhand cars at reasonable prices. After more than a decade of dealing with desperately poor people who buy faulty cars at greatly-inflated prices and are then further ripped off by being charged huge interest and loan fees, I see no other way of preventing this. Cars are essential for people with families, especially those with sick children who require frequent trips to doctors, hospitals and chemists
Unfortunately, successive governments have to date shown little appetite to take serious steps to protect low income people from fringe lenders.
The recommendations in the 2007 report on Pacific credit were not implemented by the previous government.
A review of the operation of the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act 2003 is currently underway, with submissions closing on 14 November 2009. However, the discussion document released by the Ministry of Consumer Affairs and the Government - Review of the Operation of the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act 2003 - appears to indicate that the review will simply tinker with minor issues, rather than lead to the sort of action required to achieve substantial change.
Labour MP Charles Chauvel has drafted a member’s bill titled the Credit Reforms (Responsible Lending) Bill which would cap interest rates and require creditors to make inquiries about debtors’ financial positions to ascertain whether they can meet the repayments under the loan. It appears unlikely, though, that the bill has any prospect of being passed.
Yet just because the Government is not prepared to act, that does not mean that the community cannot take steps. A number of people have contacted me with suggestions. These include -
* Setting up a community micro-lending operation. this would be modelled on the Grameen Foundation operations in other countries – The Grameen Foundation uses micro-finance, providing tiny loans and financial services to assist the poor – mainly women – to start businesses and escape poverty. A New Zealand operation could provide cheap loans for household bills, emergency loans for people needing to return to the islands at short notice for family funerals, and for car purchases. This would remove people from the clutches of loan sharks without the need to wait for a government to act to do it . People with small spare sums of money – perhaps a few hundred dollars or, even better, a few thousand – could put the money interest free, into a fund which would lend to people needing assistance.The borrowers would repay the money as they could, and the repaid money could then be lent to someone else.
*Car pools – in Berlin, a scheme operates enabling people to make use of cars when they need them, rather than everyone buying their own cars when they do not require them every day.
What YOU Can Do
Everybody can make some contribution to ridding New Zealand of loan sharks. There does not need to be a major time or monetary input involved. I am in contact with about half a dozen people who have contacted me after reading my articles and would like to take action. It would be good if someone wanted to set up a more organised email means of us keeping in touch
Write or email Consumer
Affairs Minister Heather Roy, Prime Minister John Key and
your local MP asking them to take some of the steps outlined
in this article and any other steps you may suggest –
Write to Ms Roy, Mr Key and your local MP in support of the
Credit Reforms (Responsible Lending) Bill
Make a
submission on the review of the Credit Contracts and
Consumer Finance Act
Lobby for restrictions on credit
advertising
Write to the Prime Minister and Kiwibank
advocating that is make cheap loans available to low income
people
Is anyone willing to look into setting up a
micro-lending operation in New Zealand ?
Create a panel
of people with expertise about car mechanics – I bought my
car at a car fair for $3900. A friend with mechanical
expertise went with me to check the car out. There are many
other people out there who like cars and think hanging
around at car fairs and car yards is a fun way to spend
weekends. If they were prepared to offer their time, they
could go with potential purchasers to check out cars for
them. This would stop people from buying cars which break
down within days and would be a major way of preventing
people from being ripped off.
ENDS
Catriona MacLennan is a South Auckland
barrister and
journalist.