Affiliation:
1. Nottingham Business School Nottingham Trent University Nottingham UK
2. Business School University of Huddersfield Huddersfield UK
3. Loughborough Business School Loughborough University Loughborough UK
Abstract
AbstractWe examine the effects of the bankruptcy benefit and adverse events on the consumer bankruptcy decision. Employing zero‐inflated ordered probit models and a unique longitudinal survey of approximately 66,000 individuals in Great Britain, we find that consumers are more likely to enter into bankruptcy proceedings when the bankruptcy benefit increases and when they become unemployed. We find that the effects of adverse events differ across bankruptcy types. Individuals who experience the onset of health problems are more likely to choose reorganization of debts (i.e., income gleaning), whereas individuals who get divorced or separated are more likely to prefer the discharge of debts (i.e., fresh start). We also examine access to credit after bankruptcy. We find that individuals are excluded from the credit markets post‐bankruptcy and the impact differs across bankruptcy types. Credit exclusion for fresh starters is dramatic, swift but short‐lived, while for income gleaners, it is gradual, slow but lasts longer.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting
Reference56 articles.
1. Shame as it ever was: Stigma and personal bankruptcy;Athreya K.;Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly,2004
2. Fresh start or head start? Uniform bankruptcy exemptions and welfare
3. Welfare implications of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1999
4. Credit exclusion in quantitative models of bankruptcy: Does it matter?;Athreya K. B.;Economic Quarterly,2006
5. Mortgage discrimination and FHA loan performance;Berkovec J. A.;Cityscape: A Journal of Policy Development and Research,1996