Bankruptcy risk score

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A bankruptcy risk score is a number that indicates the likelihood of an individual filing for bankruptcy. Although it has been used for over twenty years to assess risk in lending, few consumers know of it.[ citation needed ] It is related to the better-known credit score, but unlike credit scores, bankruptcy risk scores are not sold to consumers by any of the credit bureaus. [1] Consequentially, individuals have little or no way of knowing what their bankruptcy risk scores are or how to improve upon them. Furthermore, since there is no standardized index of measurement, consumers often have trouble contextualizing their score on a standardized scale, instead only receiving general information from a single bureau. [2]

This is also referred to as debt analysis which allows lenders the ability to assess a customer's risk in taking out a loan. One can improve their score by paying bills on time, keeping balances low, and having few revolving accounts.

Equifax, a US credit bureau, offers a bankruptcy risk score called the Bankruptcy Navigator Index to its commercial clients. [3] The BNI 4.0 considers a consumer's credit balances versus credit limits as the most heavily weighted factor. It has a scoring range starting at 1 (low) and ends at 600 (high) with lower scores being a greater risk for filing for bankruptcy within the next 2 years. [4] Most credit card issuers do not disclose the use of BNI on a letter of denial and it is difficult for consumers to know their score. [5]

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Credit scoring systems in the United States have garnered considerable criticism from various media outlets, consumer law organizations, government officials, debtors unions, and academics. Racial bias, discrimination against prospective employees, discrimination against medical and student debt holders, poor risk predictability, manipulation of credit scoring algorithms, inaccurate reports, and overall immorality are some of the concerns raised regarding the system. Danielle Citron and Frank Pasquale list three major flaws in the current credit-scoring system:

  1. Disparate impacts: The algorithms systematize biases that have been measured externally and are known to impact disadvantaged groups such as racial minorities and women. Because the algorithms are proprietary, they cannot be tested for built-in human bias.
  2. Arbitrary: Research shows that there is substantial variation in scoring based on audits. Responsible financial behavior can be penalized.
  3. Opacity: credit score technology is not transparent so consumers are unable to know why their credit scores are affected.

References

  1. bankrate.com. "This secret score can hurt your credit". msn.com. Archived from the original on 19 August 2007. Retrieved 12 August 2007.
  2. Kaur, Gene. "Bankruptcy Risk Score". BoostCredit101.com. S.B.C. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  3. "Bankruptcy Navigator Index 4.0". Equifax.com. Equifax. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  4. "Equifax Bankruptcy Navigator Index 4.0" (PDF). Equifax. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  5. "Are you a bankruptcy risk? Enigmatic score may tell lenders". CreditCards.com, LLC. Retrieved 21 March 2018.