PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How some states help residents avoid costly debt during hard times

Study finds generous unemployment insurance benefits may be key

2024-08-16
(Press-News.org) COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new national study provides the best evidence to date that generous unemployment insurance benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic helped reduce reliance on high-cost credit use.

 

Researchers found that lower-income residents of states with more generous benefits were significantly less likely than those living in less-generous states to take out new credit cards, personal finance loans and payday loans or other alternative financial service offerings.

 

The study, published recently in the journal Nature Human Behaviour, was led by Rachel Dwyer, professor of sociology at The Ohio State University, and Stephanie Moulton, professor in Ohio State’s John Glenn College of Public Affairs.

 

The findings provide evidence that programs like unemployment insurance can play a powerful role in keeping low-income Americans from falling further behind financially, said Moulton.

 

“Providing more generous unemployment benefits helps people avoid these really expensive types of debt that are costly not only for individuals, but eventually for society,” Moulton said.

 

A key strength of the study was its large sample of 2.3 million Americans, who were studied from the end of 2019 through the end of 2021.  The researchers used data from the consumer credit bureau Experian to determine if those in the study took out a credit card, personal finance loan or an alternative financial service (AFS) loan during the time of the research.

 

The researchers took advantage of the fact that some states were more generous in how much unemployment insurance benefits they provided to residents than others as well as differences in the timing of benefit expansion and contraction within a state. This variation allowed them to see if the level of benefit generosity had an impact on whether Americans avoided costly debt.

 

“Unemployment insurance is a key part of the safety net in the United States, and it affects a lot of people,” Dwyer said. “We were able to test how it affected people of various income levels during the COVID recession.”

 

Results showed that more generous unemployment insurance benefits did indeed result in less use of costly credit use, mostly among those in the lowest-income households.

 

There was a 9.7% lower probability of the lowest-income consumers taking out a new credit card when unemployment insurance benefits in a state were the most generous compared to when benefits in a state were the least generous, the study found.

 

The difference was even more stark when the researchers examined AFS loans.  These are loans outside the traditional banking institutions, such as payday loans, where interest rates may be significantly higher than traditional forms of borrowing.

 

“A lot of these are online loans, and they’re quite accessible because of that, but they are not regulated in the same way as traditional financial institutions,” Dwyer said. “And they have very high interest rates.”

 

The study found that the lowest-income consumers were 24% more likely to take out AFS loans when state unemployment benefits were the least generous compared to when state unemployment benefits were the most generous.

 

When high and middle-income households lost their jobs because of the pandemic, they were able to rely on savings, or they could use credit cards, to help them get through for a few weeks or months of unemployment, Moulton said.  But the lowest-income consumers often don’t have savings and aren’t eligible for credit cards, or have already maxed out their credit limit.

 

“For low-income consumers, AFS loans may be the only place they can go as their last resort, so they turn to these very expensive ways to make ends meet,” Moulton said.

 

“We found that more generous benefits really seemed to save at least some low-income consumers from having to make that choice.”

 

In addition to their main analysis, the researchers also examined alternative measures of how consumers may have been coping with the COVID recession, such as spending on existing credit cards or applying for loans regardless of whether or not they were approved, Dwyer said.

 

“Our results were quite consistent, with lower-income consumers faring better in states when benefits were generous,” she said.

 

One question that taxpayers often ask is whether government programs like unemployment insurance provide society with a good return on investment.  These findings suggest another benefit that should be considered, Moulton said.

 

“If we are preventing some share of this really high-cost borrowing from happening, we are preventing a cost that might ultimately be borne by society,” she said.

 

“There are domino effects where consumers might end up in bankruptcy if they have to use high-interest loans to make ends meet, which isn’t just bad for their own credit, it can raise the cost of credit for others as well.”

 

Other co-authors of the study were Lawrence Berger, J. Michael Collins and Alec Rhodes from the University of Wisconsin-Madison; Meta Brown from Ohio State; Jason Houle from Dartmouth College; and Davon Norris from the University of Michigan.

 

Support for the study came from the Russell Sage Foundation, the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (including through a seed grant from the Ohio State Institute for Population Research), the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the U.S. Social Security Administration’s Retirement and Disability Research Consortium.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Same person. Different place. Twice the odds of a dementia diagnosis.

2024-08-16
With new medications on the market or in the works for Alzheimer’s disease and other kinds of dementia, a new study suggests that getting the diagnosis needed to access these new treatments may depend on where you live.  The percentage of people who get a new dementia diagnosis each year varies a lot across regions of the U.S., the study finds. And the differences between regions of the country are even larger for people on the young end of the dementia-risk age range, ages 66 to 74, and for those who are Black ...

The banana apocalypse is near, but UMass Amherst biologists might have found a key to their survival

The banana apocalypse is near, but UMass Amherst biologists might have found a key to their survival
2024-08-16
August 16, 2024   The Banana Apocalypse is Near, but UMass Amherst Biologists Might Have Found a Key to Their Survival Discovery of molecular mechanisms used by the banana-destroying microbe brings hope to the breakfast table   AMHERST, Mass. – The bananas in your supermarket and that you eat for breakfast are facing functional extinction due to the disease Fusarium wilt of banana (FWB) caused by a fungal pathogen called Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. cubense (Foc) tropical race 4 (TR4). However,  thanks to recent research from an ...

Rethinking the dodo

Rethinking the dodo
2024-08-16
Rethinking the Dodo Review of 400 years of scientific literature corrects the record on icon of extinction Researchers are setting out to challenge our misconceptions about the Dodo, one of the most well-known but poorly understood species of bird. In a paper published today [16 August 2024] in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society researchers from the University of Southampton, Natural History Museum (NHM) and Oxford University Museum of Natural History have undertaken the most comprehensive review of the taxonomy of the Dodo and its closest relative, the Rodriguez ...

Arts and crafts improves your mental health as much as having a job, scientists find

2024-08-16
Could arts and crafts help protect the public’s mental health? A new study in Frontiers in Public Health provides evidence that indulging our creative side could provide everyone with a significant wellbeing boost. Because arts and crafts are relatively affordable and accessible, promoting the public’s access to artistic activities could provide a major boost to public mental health. “Crafting and other artistic activities showed a meaningful effect in predicting people’s ...

It’s a rave – underground acoustics amplify soil health

It’s a rave – underground acoustics amplify soil health
2024-08-16
Barely audible to human ears, healthy soils produce a cacophony of sounds in many forms – a bit like an  underground rave concert of bubble pops and clicks. Special recordings made by Flinders University ecologists in Australia show this chaotic mixture of soundscapes can be a measure of the diversity of tiny living animals in the soil, which create sounds as they move and interact with their environment. With 75% of the world’s soils degraded, the future of the teeming community of living species that live underground face a dire future without restoration, says microbial ecologist Dr Jake Robinson, from the Frontiers ...

New poll finds 50% of parents believe too much time on technology hinders kids from forming connections in the classroom

2024-08-16
COLUMBUS, Ohio (August 16, 2024) – Building positive connections with teachers and peers in the classroom can be critical to the mental health and academic success of children and adolescents. Yet, a new national poll from The Kids Mental Health Foundation, conducted by Ipsos, finds half of parents believe spending too much time on technology and social media hinder children from making meaningful connections as they head into the upcoming school year.  The poll, conducted by Ipsos on behalf of ...

How policing impacts the homeless

How policing impacts the homeless
2024-08-16
People who are homeless often endure constant and intrusive police interactions, leaving them feeling intimidated, harassed and stigmatised, a new study finds. More people of all ages and backgrounds are finding themselves homeless, often due to job loss or illness, as well as a lack of affordable housing. Between 2016 and 2021 homelessness increased by 5.2% in Australia.  Professor of Law Thalia Anthony from the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) said the research aimed to give a voice to people experiencing homelessness ...

Scottish and Irish rocks confirmed as rare record of ‘snowball Earth’

Scottish and Irish rocks confirmed as rare record of ‘snowball Earth’
2024-08-16
A rock formation spanning Ireland and Scotland may be the world’s most complete record of “snowball Earth”, a crucial moment in planetary history when the globe was covered in ice, finds a new study led by UCL (University College London) researchers. The study, published in the Journal of the Geological Society of London, found that the Port Askaig Formation, composed of layers of rock up to 1.1km thick, was likely laid down between 662 to 720 million years ago during the Sturtian glaciation – the first of two global freezes thought to have ...

Research provides a roadmap for improving electrochemical performance

2024-08-16
Thomas Edison went through thousands of materials before he finally found the right tungsten filament to create a working lightbulb. This type of trial-and-error research continues today and is responsible for countless inventions that improve our world. Battery systems that help power our lives in many seen (and unseen) ways are one example. However, improving these materials and devices requires more than experimentation. Modern engineers must also form a deeper understanding of the general principles that govern material performance, from which they can design better materials to achieve challenging product requirements.  In a paper ...

Females’ and males’ muscles differ in sugar and fatty acid handling

2024-08-16
Females’ and males’ muscles differ in glucose and fatty acid handling – but regular physical activity quickly triggers similar beneficial metabolic changes in the muscles of both sexes, new research to be presented at this year’s Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) (Madrid, 9-13 September) has found. Exercise has a potent effect on skeletal muscle and is the most effective strategy to prevent weight loss-related muscle loss and type 2 diabetes. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Cancer cells may be using lipids to hide from the immune system

NASA completes spacecraft to transport, support Roman Space Telescope

University of Health Sciences earns $5.3 million from NIH to boost cancer research, support emerging scientists

Central America could play troubling new role in cocaine trade

SwRI and UTSA will create synthetic process for antibiotic drug discovery

Norwegian Afghanistan veterans more prone to anger

Black hole pairs may unveil new particles

Amsterdam UMC led research sets a step forward in the battle against MRSA

Childhood trauma linked to major biological and health risks

Beneath the brushstrokes, van Gogh’s sky is alive with real-world physics

Excess body weight and the risk of second primary cancers among cancer survivors

Outcomes by race and ethnicity following a Medicare bundled payment program for joint replacement

LJI discovery paves the way for antivirals against Ebola virus and its deadly relatives

Advanced 3D mammography detects more breast cancers, fewer false positives

How an MBA can empower entrepreneurs

Ten-year study shows tomosynthesis improves breast cancer detection

How can climate adaptation succeed in the long run?

Moderate coffee and caffeine consumption is associated with lower risk of developing multiple cardiometabolic diseases, new study finds

New four-year, $3.26 million grant from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke establishes the Mount Sinai Center for Undiagnosed Diseases

Lupus Research Alliance announces recipients of 2024 Diversity in Lupus Research Awards

New survey from Abbott finds epidemiologists believe viral and mosquito-borne pathogens are priority concerns for disease outbreaks

A wobble from Mars could be sign of dark matter, MIT study finds

In step toward solar fuels, durable artificial photosynthesis setup chains two carbons together

Risk of clots, stroke from incorrect blood thinner dosing reduced using online dashboard

Juan Jimenez named Blavatnik Regional Awards finalist

Nine outstanding postdoctoral scholars for the 2024 Blavatnik Regional Awards for Young Scientists announced

People underestimate the income of the top 1%

ChatGPT and cultural bias

National political dialogue focused on power and morals

Police body-camera footage as data

[Press-News.org] How some states help residents avoid costly debt during hard times
Study finds generous unemployment insurance benefits may be key