In Praise of Credit Checks
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
Recently
by Jeffrey A. Tucker: The
Sole of the Runner
It was maybe
third grade when the schoolyard was abuzz with a terrible thing.
It was called the "permanent record." If you did something
bad enough, it would go on the permanent record. And then a one-day
slip up would turn into a deep scar, a mortal sin that would last
forever and permanently reduce your chances to make it in life.
We imagined
some suited committee reaching deep into the file and discovering
that we had loosened someone's fingers as they tried to climb the
monkey bars, or that we bonked someone on the back with an eraser
full of chalk, or that we started a dinner-roll fight in the lunchroom,
or that we put a firecracker down the sink in the restroom.
Whatever the
sin, if it went on the permanent record, it would never go away.
Probably there
was no such thing. Or maybe there was and no one cared. For my part,
I realized the dream of every public-school kid when, in the fifth
grade, the entire school burned down and my first thought
was: so much for the permanent record!
But as we reach
adulthood, we begin to realize that something like the "permanent
record" does exist. It is called the credit report. Its assembly
and maintenance involves no police, no bureaucrats, no government
offices, no one paid by the taxpayer. It is unconcerned about your
looks, your politics, your preferences, or your associations. It
is entirely private, and it judges only one thing. It is put together
because interested parties need to know.
You want to
rent an apartment? Check the credit report. Want a car loan? We'll
soon know how reliable you are. Want electricity to your home? You
are not going to get it unless there is a reasonable expectation
that you are going to pay for it. And the way to discover that is
to examine your past.
Credit reports
aren't perfect, and everyone has a story about some mistake. But
the key point is that, because they are private, there is an incentive
structure in place to fix errors and improve reporting. They strive
to be as accurate as possible, because this is what lenders want.
And it turns out that every detailed study has shown them to be
incredibly accurate and very good at dispute resolution.
And so, if
you missed a payment on some bill, it's noted. If you skipped out
on a lease, it is noted. If you bailed out of an obligation to pay
a monthly payment on a car, and the car ends up being repossessed,
it is there in black and white.
Sure, it is
a bit creepy. It's how we imagine it will be once we approach the
pearly gates. All will be known. Our good looks, smile, and charm
count for nothing. We will have to provide an accounting, blow by
blow. The BS detector will be fully functional. By comparison, the
breathalyzer is nothing. That kind of makes anyone bite the lip
a bit.
And yet, think
of it. No one comes to arrest you. There is no violence. You are
not thrown in debtor's prison. No one puts a scarlet letter on you.
All that a negative report can do is cause you not to be trusted
with credit again. This is entirely reasonable. And there are ways
to fix the problem. You can pay into a card account that debits
cash rather than extending credit. And it is absolutely the case
that every possible creditor is cheering for you to get your life
in order. They want to extend credit. They want to do business.
They have a direct interest in shaping up your moral character.
On the other
hand, if you do the right thing and meet all your obligations as
your contract them, you are handsomely rewarded. The more you behave,
the more people trust you. The more certain it becomes that you
will pay what you owe, the more people are going to extend you credit.
The truly wonderful
thing about this system is that it is entirely private and results
from the voluntary interaction of human beings in the marketplace.
No one is forced into it. But if you choose to be part of the credit
system, you must behave. You must do the right thing. You must not
steal from others, which is what it really means not to pay your
bills. The credit report is nothing other than a report on whether
you tend to do what is right or what is wrong.
Thus is there
no point in cursing the system or decrying it as an invasion of
your life. The credit report is the best friend of the responsible
in the same way that it is the worst enemy of the irresponsible.
In other words, it tells the truth, and the truth can be good or
bad for you depending on what is true.
I've rarely
heard this system credited for raising the moral level of society.
But surely it does. Yes, people should do the right thing whether
or not there is a reward or punishment associated with an action.
People should pay their bills even if failure to do so does not
end up on the permanent record. But the inner drive to virtue can
only take us so far. It is better to have systems in place that
provide incentives to behave, with rewards for doing the right thing
rather than the wrong thing.
This is what
the credit-reporting system provides. In this, it is more effective
than sermonizing, lectures, books on building character, advertising
campaigns, or even surveillance. The credit report links cause and
effect in a beautiful way, rendering one of the oldest moral principles
known to man into a convenient score that is attached to you and
you alone.
It
so many ways, this system is a creature of capitalism, and it works
beautifully. And compare it with the ghastly system created by the
state, the elaborate apparatus to make sure that the government
has forced us to cough up the maximum amount of wealth they say
that we owe. One system tries to prevent thievery while the other
system tries to make thievery more efficient. I can't imagine a
better contrast in how institutions deal with human beings and the
effect of those institutions on who we are and the choices we make.
This is just
one example of the general principle: private markets reward good
behavior and make us better people; public bureaucracies do the
opposite.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
October
28, 2011
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
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