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Taming the Fringe - The Regulation and Development of the British Payday Lending and Pawnbroking Markets since 1870 (Paperback, 1st ed. 2021)
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Taming the Fringe - The Regulation and Development of the British Payday Lending and Pawnbroking Markets since 1870 (Paperback, 1st ed. 2021)
Series: Palgrave Studies in the History of Finance
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Taming the Fringe analyses the regulation and evolution of two
credit products that were, and remain, vital to the working poor.
Policymakers have struggled with pawnbroking and moneylending
because they raise broader issues pertaining to poverty, capitalism
and financial regulation. The values of easily accessible credit
and financial independence compete with society's desire to protect
people from predatory loans. Policymakers have pondered whether
regulation can lower costs without reducing access for those most
in need of small cash loans. Can government policy protect
borrowers while also providing sufficient profit for lenders? The
many attempts at doing so reveal the difficulty of safeguarding the
needs of people who have experienced financial trouble before
seeking a loan. Taming the Fringe is the first extended study of
the payday lending and pawnbroking markets in Britain, and the only
one to examine over 160 years of financial results and market data.
This work explains why small-value lenders have generated such
passionate debate, even being described as the devil incarnate. It
adds to our knowledge of fringe banking and the evolving role of
financial regulation to protect the working poor. Since 1870,
pawnbrokers and moneylenders have actively shaped regulation - a
viewpoint the existing literature does not address adequately. This
work contributes to the scholarly and policy dialogue on financial
inclusion, working-class poverty and the development and legitimacy
of fringe lending. This book analyses the motivation, content and
outcome of critical regulatory episodes that have shaped fringe
banking. While historians have written volumes about consumer
credit, few have analysed why elite policymakers have sought to
protect the working poor from some credit markets. This work
demonstrates that, across time, conflicting views on poverty and
liberal economic theory have, to varying degrees, influenced how
the government has protected the working poor, and will be of
interest to financial and economic historians.
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