The Consequences of Prohibiting Credit Inquiry Data in Chilean Credit Files
NCLC Supports the “3 Ps” of Lending: Pawn Shops, Predatory Lenders and Pay Day Lenders
Optimal Consumer Credit Bureau Market Structure in Singapore
Credit Reporting Customer Payment Data
This study examines the impact and benefits that accrue to consumers, lenders, and utilities and telecommunications firms when telecoms and utilities report customer payment information to credit bureaus.
New to Credit from Alternative Data
Roadmap to Reform: Lessons from around the world to guide consumer credit reporting reform in Australia
Information Sharing and SMME Financing in South Africa: A Survey of the Landscape
This report focuses on the current state of credit access for small, medium, and micro-enterprises in South Africa. In particular, it examines barriers to credit access and viable near-term solutions to reduce or eliminate those barriers.
Recovering But Not Recovered: Gulf Coast Businesses Three Years Later
This is a follow-up to the 2007 small business survey and provides further insight as to the progress of recovery from the hurricanes of 2005. As with the 2007 survey, this year’s survey asked small business owners and operators about the changing state of their business since the 2005 hurricanes, and since August of 2007.
Financial Impacts of Disaster: What We Can Learn from Credit File Data
This report sheds additional light on the impact and aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the storms of 2005 on individuals, businesses, and communities of the Gulf Coast, using datasets previously not used for such purposes.
You Score You Win: The Consequences of Giving Credit Where Credit is Due
The Structure of Information Sharing and Credit Access: Lessons for Policy
This white-paper, produced for the Asia-Pacific Credit Coalition, outlines recent developments in the economic impact of information sharing in consumer credit markets.
Using non-traditional data for underwriting loans to thin-file borrowers: Evidence, tips, and precautions
This paper, published in the Journal of Risk Management in Financial Institutions, demonstrates the value of non-traditional data as a powerful tool for consumer credit risk assessment while highlighting some of the potential risks and precautions that lenders need to think about before using these tools.
Economic Fairness Through Smarter Lending: Some Factors to Consider on the Eve of Brazilian Credit Reporting Reform
As the Brazilian congress weighs its options, we survey and analyze the more comprehensive and systematic of the studies to detail important lessons to consider on the eve of credit reporting reform in Brazil.
Recovery, Renewal, and Resiliency: Gulf Coast Small Businesses Two Years Later
The first PERC survey of small businesses in New Orleans and other FEMA-declared disaster areas in the wake of the 2005 hurricanes finds disparate impacts among different segments of business owners. The results also yield insights into the efficacy of existing recovery policy, and identify policy shortcomings and unmet needs.
Economic Impacts of Payment Reporting Participation in Latin America
The study assesses the impact of varying participation rates on access to credit and default rates in Latin America. A series of micro-simulations demonstrates the importance of participation in a private, full-file credit reporting system.
The Impact of Provider- Identifiable Data on Healthcare Quality and Cost
This study examines the uses of provider-identifiable data within the US healthcare system with particular emphasis on the impact of the commercial use of this data on the market for prescription drugs. Impacts on market structure, the operation of the market, and other non-economic variables are also addressed. Additionally, the study explores the role of these data in regulatory compliance and public research.
On the Impact of Credit Payment Reporting on the Financial Sector and Overall Economic Performance in Japan
The study compares the fragmented Japanese consumer credit reporting regime with a hypothetical comprehensive one. Impacts of the varying regimes — each with different types and amounts of payment information available to creditors — upon access to credit and default rates, growth in lending to the private sector and overall economic growth are examined.
Give Credit Where Credit is Due: Increasing Access to Affordable Mainstream Credit Using Alternative Data
PERC’s landmark study on bringing the estimated 35 to 54 million Americans outside the mainstream credit system into the credit fold, Give Credit Where Credit Is Due offers feasible market solutions involving “alternative” or non-traditional payment data, such as payment obligations such as rent, gas, electric, insurance, and other recurring obligations, to evaluate the risk profile of a potential borrower.
Towards a Rational Data Breach Notification Regime
Credit File Freeze: Position Paper
Giving Underserved Consumers Better Access to the Credit System: The Promise of Non-traditional Data
PERC’s initial study on alternative data, Giving Underserved Consumers Better Access to the Credit System examines the likely win-win outcome if non-traditional data is included in credit files.
How Safe and Secure Is It?
Class Action Tort Costs and the Consequences for Innovation
Privacy Rights and Policy Wrongs: How Data Restrictions can Impair Information-Led Development in Emerging Markets
2003 Privacy Report Card
The Fair Credit Reporting Act: Access, Efficiency and Opportunity - Part II
This study confirms the findings of the initial FCRA study. It examines degradation in predictive power of a generic commercial scoring model, even when that model is “re-optimized” or“retooled” to account for the simulated data restrictions.
Congress Faces Critical Decision About Consumer Credit Legislation (The Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1970 and 1996)
PERC fellow Dr. Joseph Duncan discusses FCRA reauthorization in the Journal of Business Economics. Reprinted with permission from the National Association for Business Economics, 1233 20th St NW, Ste 505, Washington, DC 20036, www.nabe.com.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act: Access, Efficiency, and Opportunity
Measuring the True Cost of Privacy: A Rebuttal to “Privacy, Consumers, and Costs”
Consumers, Citizens, Charity and Content: Attitudes Toward Teleservices
Asia-Pacific Credit Coalition
APCC is a PERC-managed coalition of organizations committed to promoting a regional standard for full-file, comprehensive consumer credit reporting to private credit bureaus within the twenty-one Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) member economies. Please visit PERC's coalition for credit standards in the APEC region, the Asia-Pacific Credit Coalition
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The report offers a broad overview of PERC research on alternative data, specifically focusing on the new to credit consumer population and how their ability to obtain credit is increased through the reporting of alternative data.

























