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How Financial Literacy Affects Household Debt and Bankruptcy

April 09, 2024 / 12:43

This episode of The Ripple Effect covers the impact of social safety net programs on household debt, the relationship between Medicaid expansion and credit card usage, and racial disparities in bankruptcy access. Host Dan Looney speaks with Sasha Andarte, an assistant professor of Finance at the Wharton School, about her research findings.

Andarte discusses how programs like Medicaid can influence consumer behavior regarding debt. She explains that expanded access to Medicaid may lead to reduced credit card debt as individuals feel more financially secure, but it can also encourage increased spending due to decreased precautionary savings.

The conversation shifts to the effects of social insurance programs on creditors. Andarte shares that improved financial resilience among insured individuals can lead to higher credit limits and better credit scores, which may paradoxically increase household debt levels.

Andarte also highlights her research on racial disparities in bankruptcy filings. She notes that Black filers face higher dismissal rates in bankruptcy cases, which can have significant economic and health consequences.

Finally, the episode concludes with a discussion on potential reforms to the bankruptcy process to improve access and reduce bias, including the use of algorithms to aid decision-making.

TL;DR

Sasha Andarte discusses how Medicaid impacts household debt and racial disparities in bankruptcy access.

Episode

12:43
00:00:00
now inflation is kind of special because
00:00:01
one of the economic effects of inflation
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is that it tends to make people less
00:00:05
averse to taking on debt the idea is if
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you have a fixed amount that you're
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promising to repay in the future and you
00:00:11
expect more inflation going forward then
00:00:14
the real value of what you promised to
00:00:16
repay it's not going to be quite so
00:00:18
large because in the future $1,000 isn't
00:00:20
going to have the same purchasing power
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as it does today easy to say that when
00:00:24
you have that feeling of being able to
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spend more that's when the potential for
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the concern around higher levels of debt
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and potential bankruptcy pops up welcome
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to the ripple effect the podcast that
00:00:36
takes you on a journey through the minds
00:00:38
of Wharton faculty I'm your host Dan
00:00:40
Looney and in each episode we'll be
00:00:42
diving deep into the inspiration behind
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the groundbreaking research that whon
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professors have conducted and exploring
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how their findings resonate with the
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world today well programs like Social
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Security Medicare unemployment insurance
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and others provide an important safety
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net for families but how do these
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programs impact the concern around
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household debt having those programs May
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deter people from savings as much as
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they probably should Sasha and darte is
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an assistant professor of Finance here
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at the waren school she has taking a
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deeper dive into this and she joins us
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here in studio nice to see you thanks
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for a few moments today thanks for
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having me you know this is an
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interesting topic I guess especially
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because people don't necessarily
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associate the availability of these
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types of programs
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to still being able to put away savings
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I agree I think uh it's not usually the
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first thing that comes to people's mind
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when you think about the social safety
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net how is that going to impact people's
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borrowing but it turns out from my
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research it looks like those programs
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can have uh really large interaction
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with credit markets and actually a
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really big part of the social welfare
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benefits from these programs can
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actually work through credit markets so
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take us through the research because
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part of it you did some research about
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the impact of Medicaid and the number of
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people eligible in a particular area can
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have a direct impact on the usage of
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things like like credit cards right so
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in a recent working paper with my
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co-author fellow Wharton Professor
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Gideon Borstein we study the impact of
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expanding Medicaid under the Affordable
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Care Act on consumers use of credit card
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debt in particular now it's not obvious
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from economic theory what you would
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expect you could get less credit card
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debt less debt overall and perhaps even
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more safe
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if for example people when they fall
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sick if they now have insurance they
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might not need to borrow or to draw down
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their Savings in order to afford the
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cost of that care now on the other hand
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people might have a less of a what we
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would call in economics a precautionary
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savings motive this is the idea that you
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use your own savings you build up wealth
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in order to ensure yourself against
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Adverse Events like job loss or or
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illness in this case and then finally
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credit Supply might also react to how
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people's behavior changes after Medicaid
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expands in particular if people now have
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insurance and they default less often
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they're in a sense more financially
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resilient and creditors might be more
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willing to lend to them in terms of you
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know people feeling like Medicaid it
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helps them feel like they're probably
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more free to be able to spend in other
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areas right exactly so this is uh this
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precautionary savings piece of people's
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behavior if you're going to be able to
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rely on Medicaid when you become sick
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you might have a little bit more leeway
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to spend even outside of times when
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you're not necessarily sick because you
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don't need to self-insure that much with
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your own savings and then so also speak
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to the component about how social
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insurance programs can actually help
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creditors as well exactly so when people
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get access to insurance we see for
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example in our own research people
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become less likely to default overall in
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particular they are less likely to have
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debt and collections which is one of the
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worst things that you can have on your
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credit report report so this reduction
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in default that's going to make
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creditors more likely we find to approve
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requests for credit cards people will
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see an increase in their credit limits
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essentially the supply of credit is
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reacting to people's improved Financial
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resilience so those creditors feel more
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amenable to being able to provide these
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assets to those members of the public
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that's exactly the idea that's because
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doesn't that kind of open a door they're
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basically open the opening the door to
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the potential problems that we're
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talking about here with some of the
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issues of household Deb yes so in our
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paper we see things running in one
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particular direction overall we see that
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Medicaid expands it's overall reducing
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default people's credit scores improve
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and despite taking on more debt their
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financial capacity their ability to
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tolerate having a lot of debt that's
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also improving as a result but if you
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did have an expansion in credit without
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these improvements to people's Financial
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resilience that's when I would be
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especially worried about the burden that
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that debt imposes so is this somewhat
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similar to maybe what we're hearing now
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about people relying on their credit
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cards in some cases because of the level
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of inflation they may not have as much
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money in the bank as they would like to
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so they're using credit cards to replace
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that this could be part of what we're
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seeing recently with credit cards now
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inflation is kind of special because one
00:05:19
of the economic effects of inflation is
00:05:21
that it tends to make people less averse
00:05:23
to taking on debt the idea is if you
00:05:25
have a fixed amount that you're
00:05:26
promising to repay in the future and you
00:05:28
expect more inflation going forward then
00:05:31
the real value of what you promis to
00:05:34
repay it's not going to be quite so
00:05:35
large because in the future $1,000 isn't
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going to have the same purchasing power
00:05:39
as it does today easy to say that when
00:05:41
you have that feeling of being able to
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spend more that's when the potential for
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the concern around higher levels of debt
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and potential bankruptcy pops up it's
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hard to say whether people's Financial
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resilience is necessarily going to be
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worse overall that's really the key
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thing to understand whether or not an
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expansion of credit is going to be a
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good or bad thing so is inflation really
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helping people to the extent that they
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maybe anticipate that that it will in
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terms of making their debt affordable
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how much is the burden of debt that that
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people carry directly tied to not having
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the cash on hand that can be an enormous
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uh burden so if you do not have the cash
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to afford your debt payments typically
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people they then go delinquent so they
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start to miss some of their payments and
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that that debt it can continue to build
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up over time uh some types of debt it
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continue it can for example like credit
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card debt it can continue to build
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interest so the overall burden can grow
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and then when people are finding
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themselves with a overwhelming amount of
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debt that's when they might seek
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something like debt relief through
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bankruptcy but I also notice you have
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looked at in the past uh the level of
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bankruptcy and how it's tied to bias
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within the within the public as well yes
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so I have some ongoing research that
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tries to uh both document and understand
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the reason behind racial disparities and
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the access to the debt relief that
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bankruptcy provides where did that start
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from where did that Genesis start from
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in terms of wanting to look at that so
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there were really two big motivating
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factors the first is that bankruptcy is
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an important source of debt relief for
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us households in fact if you actually
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compare the scale of the wealth
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transfers uh in terms of the debt
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forgiveness that bankruptcy gives people
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if you compare that to other social
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insurance programs it's bigger than a
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lot of them it's on car with programs
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like unemployment insurance or even
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larger uh in most of the years of
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unemployment insurance the second
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motivating factor beyond the importance
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of bankruptcy is that there's a big body
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of financial research that finds that
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there's a lot of racial disparities in
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financial Market outcomes so we wanted
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to see is bankruptcy also one of these
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areas where you also see racial
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disparities and there was more of an
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impact on black Americans than there
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would be in regards to white Americans
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as well correct exactly so we found for
00:07:57
example that uh now there's two
00:07:59
different types of bankruptcy chapters
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about 70% of people file Chapter 7 now
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in that chapter black filers are about
00:08:06
three percentage points more likely to
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be dismissed that might not sound like a
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lot but there's uh not a lot of uh
00:08:11
dismissal that means uh getting uh you
00:08:13
go through all the trouble of the
00:08:14
bankruptcy process but then you don't
00:08:16
get the your cases thrown out you don't
00:08:17
get the one good part of the bankruptcy
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which is the debt relief and that's
00:08:21
about double uh the Baseline rate for
00:08:24
for nonblack filers now in Chapter 13 we
00:08:27
see an even larger and absolute term
00:08:29
disparity in Chapter 13 black filers are
00:08:32
about 16 to 17 percentage points more
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likely to have their case dismissed
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which gives them about a 20% relatively
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higher rate of dismissal but can we
00:08:41
determine why the numbers are the way
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they are in terms of black filers versus
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white filers it's really difficult to to
00:08:50
get at this so we have to use a a clever
00:08:52
bit of econometrics in order to try and
00:08:54
say something about bias now the reason
00:08:56
that it's challenging is when you see a
00:08:57
disparity this could be due due to
00:09:00
unobserved variables that we're not
00:09:02
controlling for for example if black
00:09:04
filers have a greater risk of losing
00:09:06
their job in the future uh that could
00:09:08
make it hard for them to complete some
00:09:10
of the requirements in Chapter 13 and
00:09:11
that might explain some of the
00:09:12
disparities so it could just be these
00:09:15
unobservable non-controlled for
00:09:17
characteristics versus actual bias so
00:09:20
the Crux of our approach to overcome
00:09:22
this is we look at differences in the
00:09:25
black white dismissal Gap among black
00:09:28
decision makers in the bankruptcy
00:09:30
process these would be the bankruptcy
00:09:31
trustees versus white decision makers in
00:09:35
the process and the idea is when we do
00:09:36
this differencing and comparing we can
00:09:38
kind of net out these omitted factors
00:09:41
and what we're left with is how these
00:09:43
two groups make decisions differently
00:09:45
right but for blacks that uh either file
00:09:48
for uh chapter 7 or chapter 13 and they
00:09:51
don't get approved to the level that
00:09:52
they want to that just adds another
00:09:55
layer of angst for them in terms of
00:09:57
trying to get out from under that level
00:09:58
of debt exactly so when these black
00:10:00
filers are not getting access to
00:10:02
bankruptcy this can have uh really
00:10:05
negative uh economic and even Health
00:10:07
consequences there's work by uh will
00:10:09
Doby and his co-authors for example that
00:10:11
finds that uh in a they exploit a really
00:10:13
nice uh nice in a statistical sense uh a
00:10:16
natural experiment uh that led to some
00:10:18
people receiving chapter 13 debt relief
00:10:21
some people didn't get it and what they
00:10:22
found is that the ones who got the debt
00:10:24
relief they were more likely to be
00:10:26
employed they had higher income in the
00:10:28
future they were more more likely to be
00:10:29
homeowners in the future and they even
00:10:31
had improved mortality in the future so
00:10:33
if there's a disparity a racial
00:10:35
disparity in access to debt relief there
00:10:38
could be pretty far-reaching
00:10:39
consequences from this suffice it to say
00:10:41
that the research that you've done on
00:10:44
the on this topic shows that there are
00:10:46
probably quite a few adjustments that
00:10:48
could be made in terms of how this
00:10:51
process goes the structure of it in
00:10:53
order to kind of improve the process for
00:10:55
all Americans correct I I see that I
00:10:58
think our research what it does is it
00:11:00
helps illuminate uh some areas where
00:11:02
there's more room for investigation I
00:11:04
think it highlights possible Avenues of
00:11:06
policies or other changes that we could
00:11:08
make if we want to improve and give more
00:11:10
equal access to bankruptcy this could be
00:11:12
things like uh for example in Chapter 13
00:11:15
there's a lot more subjective
00:11:16
decision-making on the part of the
00:11:18
chapter 13 bankruptcy trustees they have
00:11:21
a really hard mathematical problem where
00:11:23
they have to try and forecast a person's
00:11:24
income over the next five years so
00:11:27
that's a that can be a difficult task
00:11:29
and when there's subjectivity there's
00:11:30
more scope for bias potentially to
00:11:32
influence how they handle cases so
00:11:34
trying to remove some of that
00:11:36
subjectivity and Sh maybe automating uh
00:11:39
more parts of the bankruptcy process
00:11:41
that's one Avenue that I can say for
00:11:43
sure it would work but it would be
00:11:45
useful for researchers to explore so is
00:11:47
there a next natural step that you want
00:11:49
to investigate in this process yeah I
00:11:52
think uh uh one I think investigating uh
00:11:57
ways that uh introduce the use of
00:11:59
algorithms for example to maybe Aid in
00:12:01
the decision-making process this is
00:12:03
something that's been done in other more
00:12:05
of the uh criminal areas of the law
00:12:08
where for example with respect to
00:12:10
sentencing and things like that and
00:12:12
seeing if this is something that can
00:12:13
reduce bias in bankruptcy that would be
00:12:15
useful for researchers to investigate
00:12:18
Sasha great to meet you thanks very much
00:12:19
for coming in appreciate your time today
00:12:22
thank you thank you Sasha and darte who
00:12:24
is assistant professor of Finance here
00:12:26
at the Wharton School thank you for
00:12:28
listening to the ripple effect we hope
00:12:30
you found this episode informative and
00:12:32
engaging don't forget to subscribe and
00:12:34
leave us a review so that we can
00:12:36
continue to bring you the best Insight
00:12:38
from the warden
00:12:40
School

Episode Highlights

  • The Ripple Effect Podcast
    A journey through the minds of Wharton faculty, exploring groundbreaking research.
    “Welcome to the ripple effect, the podcast that takes you on a journey...”
    @ 00m 34s
    April 09, 2024
  • Impact of Medicaid on Credit
    Research shows Medicaid expansion reduces default rates and improves credit scores.
    “Medicaid expands, it's overall reducing default...”
    @ 04m 32s
    April 09, 2024
  • Racial Disparities in Bankruptcy
    Research reveals significant racial disparities in access to bankruptcy relief.
    “If there's a disparity in access to debt relief...”
    @ 10m 38s
    April 09, 2024

Episode Quotes

  • Welcome to the ripple effect, the podcast that takes you on a journey...
    How Financial Literacy Affects Household Debt and Bankruptcy
  • The availability of these types of programs...
    How Financial Literacy Affects Household Debt and Bankruptcy
  • Medicaid expands, it's overall reducing default...
    How Financial Literacy Affects Household Debt and Bankruptcy
  • If there's a disparity in access to debt relief...
    How Financial Literacy Affects Household Debt and Bankruptcy

Key Moments

  • Podcast Introduction00:34
  • Social Safety Nets01:23
  • Medicaid Research04:32
  • Bankruptcy Disparities10:38

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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