Book Review: Broke U.S.A.
by Lawrence MeyersGary Rivlin’s new book Broke U.S.A. does a rather thorough job of chronicling the rise of the subprime lending industry in this country. The positive attributes of his tome include excellent detail and insight into how subprime lending operates in this country, very concise and descriptive prose, and some intriguing profiles of the lenders and activists involved. To the book’s credit, Mr. Rivlin describes blatantly deceptive and corrupt lending practices in the early days of consumer finance. He rightly singles out both employees and management of Household Finance and Fleet Financial for such behavior, as well as Associates Bank and NationsBank.

On the down side, however, Mr. Rivlin’s bias against subprime lenders is apparent. His profiles of activists are more comprehensive than the lenders, and they are portrayed as crusaders against an industry designed to “make money off the poor”. He fails to mention the more unflattering angles on certain activists. Further, while his research delves deeper than just about any other media story, he either deliberately omits damaging truths about the activist community, or failed to research thoroughly enough. Nor does he ever once mention the litany of non-industry-funded studies that support the cash advance industry.
There are several glaring omissions or distortions in Mr. Rivlin’s book that speak to his unfortunate bias. The first, and most significant, is lionizing the founder of the Center for Responsible Lending, Martin Eakes. Mr. Rivlin came up short in his research about Mr. Eakes. In addition, he largely gives Mr. Eakes a pass for his role in the subprime mortgage meltdown. Mr. Eakes pioneered the product and created a secondary market for these mortgages. There’s no getting around that, try as Mr. Rivlin will.
Second, Mr. Rivlin gives borrowers a complete pass on their responsibility in every transaction. While some of the people who were cheated admit to their own mistakes, nowhere in the book does Mr. Rivlin ever lay out a very simple argument: that borrowers constitute half the transaction, and are therefore half of any problems that exist within the industry. To that end, Mr. Rivlin plays the typical card of a mainstream media journalist — harping on the sob stories of subprime borrowers, but not providing any compelling stories of how borrowers were helped by subprime lenders. Anyone reading his book would come away believing that every lender mentioned was only out to cheat customers.
Third, while Mr. Rivlin goes a long way in accurately and fairly describing what can happen to regular people who are victimized by unscrupulous lenders, he fails to point out that practices of other retail services which are equally devastating, if not more so. I realize the book’s focus is on lending, but context is important. Where is the criticism of indifferent liquor stores and the fast food industry, both of which create far more devastation in lower-income communities than a cash advance default?
Indeed, context is an issue the book frequently overlooks. In chapter one, Mr. Rivlin compares the amount of revenue the subprime industry takes in compared to liquor stores and the movie business, yet neither are comparable. Yet, he leaves out the tens of billions in revenue generated by banking overdraft fees that far exceed the average cost of a cash advance. The same goes for Advance America’s 8% profit margin as exceeding that of 60% of the Fortune 500’s margins…without specifically mentioning other financial service company margins. This lack of context does not serve Mr. Rivlin well.
He certainly undoes any semblance of fairness by speaking of money paid to cash advance lenders as a “poverty tax”. A tax is money forcibly extracted from a citizen to pay for government services they may or may not receive, whereas a borrower receives credit in exchange for a fee. This style of presentation recurs frequently in the book, subtly expressing Mr. Rivlin’s bias, which he finally cops to in the Epilogue.
I wish Mr. Rivlin had spent more time on the moral issues involved. He touches on morality in the Epilogue, but it would have been wiser to place it up front, allowing readers to constantly frame the issues in a moral context. How should the pricing and terms of credit be handled for those who rightly belong in the subprime category? How much regulation is too much? At what point do we offer as much disclosure as possible and then let the customer make their own decision? What constitutes high-pressure sales tactics? What responsibilities — legal or otherwise — do vendors of any product have to undereducated consumers?
Mr. Rivlin struggles to find solutions, but he runs into the same problems many others have before him. He ultimately lacks the economic knowledge to make a persuasive argument against the fees charged by cash advance stores. He says that McDonald’s offers more than just hamburgers, so why must a cash advance store only offer one product? More products might mean lower cash advance fees. The answers are simple: Not every customer seeks a broad range of financial products when they enter a cash advance store. Adding products people don’t need does not equate to additional revenue. McDonald’s customers are there for multiple offerings. Furthermore, you would not see a price differential in McDonald’s menu if they cut back their menu to the basics. Go to In-and-Out Burger and you’ll see what I mean.
Mr. Rivlin cites the State Employees’ Credit Union of North Carolina as being able to offer cash advances at 12% APR and its CEO claims it is “the most profitable product we make”. Mr. Rivlin forgets that the credit union model and the cash advance model are totally different.
Utlimately, Broke U.S.A. is an interesting read. The issues are extremely divisive, particularly when it comes to cash advances. Mr. Rivlin got that part correct. Ultimately, however, I was disappointed that Mr. Rivlin let his bias leak into the text. It’s unnecessary. People can make their own decisions about the industry, just as I believe they can make their own decisions about credit. There are explosive allegations and questionable connections among many of these consumer activists, and I hope Mr. Rivlin will seek these out should the book have a second edition.






Subscribe via RSS
Got a Tip?
49 Comments
Broke USA?
Imagine that!
I thought it was just the tinfoil hat wearing afficianados who thought that way.
Any businessman who has ever spent time on Wall Street raising money knows how the game is played; further any businessman who has ever spent time in Washington, DC knows how that game is played also. They are both great, black holes with a proverbial meat grinder sittiing atop. They both need fresh meat for their existence. What comes out the bottom is fertilizer.
I agree with you CL but differ on the final thought, "What comes out the bottom is fertilizer." I think what comes out the bottom is highly toxic fertilizer as it poisons almost all who attempt to wade into the cesspool.
The democrats in office now, think that they are going the way of the socialists they so love, not paying any attention to the Islamafacation of AMERICA!!! Our so called government in Washington, are so in it for themselves, they can't see that the USA they are collapsing will have a direct impact on THEM too!! How can they all be so stupid???
[...] » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government [...]
Lawrence, you make the point that "borrowers are half of the transaction". This is true. I see it as a problem involving supply and demand. Usually, we try to solve the problem by attacking one or the other. Going after the supply side is the most efficient and practical way to solve the problem. Regulating demand is nearly impossible and also relies on supply side co-operation AND Government intervention to have any chance at success. Just look at the illegal drug market for an example of this.
If you cut off unscrupulous suppliers, the demand will seek out the more reputable sources out of necessity. While there is a lot more to this issue than I've discussed here, in the final analysis I think I'm going to side with the books author on this one.
Thanks for the review! I'd also like to see an in depth discussion like this on the temporary employment industry (another cancer on our society) in the near future!
Everyone knows the truth…If you can't afford a house don't buy it…and take out a home equity loan to pay off the new car ,furniture and t.v. is stupid…It had to come to this end…..you can borrow all you want but the payment comes due one day…It's all about Social Justice which is actually going on now…You can't stay up all night smoke dope and play x-box…and expect the productive people to keep paying your way…TAKE RESPONSIBILITY for your actions….Get the chip off your shoulder it's your own fault everyone is not a victim …
"I realize the book’s focus is on lending, but context is important. Where is the criticism of indifferent liquor stores and the fast food industry, both of which create far more devastation in lower-income communities than a cash advance default?"
Excuse me? Just how do the "fast food industry" and "indifferent liquor stores" "create" devastation in lower income "communities"? The "fast food industry" creates jobs and feeds people who may otherwise go hungry. Ever found yourself without your wallet, three bucks in your pocket and a grumbling stomach? Mc Donald's is far from my favorite, and I don't recommend it as a regular part of a healthy diet, but they do offer food for a very low price. And just what the hell is an "indifferent" liquor store? A business exists to make profits for the owner or shareholders. Nobody is coerced into buying alcohol or tobacco, it is a choice. Don't blame the moral failings of the consumer on the perfectly legitimate merchant. He is there because of demand for the product.
Did I miss the part where this supposedly worth-while book addresses the political aspect of the sub-prime mortgage melt-down? No mention of the primary driver in the whole criminal scheme that will cost responsible, productive Americans more and more of their current and future wealth?
This article reads like something I would expect to find in a local paper trying to be "progressive" and "fair-minded". Crap like this doesn't belong on this site.
Defend Capitalism. The more we apologize for it and allow it to take the blame for government meddling, the more ignorant people will embrace its alternative. And that is just not acceptable…
Lots of blame to go around, including the borrowers. I don't buy the victim pose from anyone who misrepresented their income and/or took foolish risks in order to live beyond their means. The herd instinct was a factor. It contributed to people switching their brains off for the largest purchases of their lives. Seeing how the tech stock mania bubble collapsed only a few years earlier, you'd think people might have learned something. Ordinarily, the experience of a bursting bubble is so traumatic that it only occurs once in a generation. But, as we all know, the baby boomer generation likes to break the mold as they stampede through life.
I hope people remember to hold Alan Greenspan accountable. He is patient zero in this plague epidemic. Several decades of the "Greenspan put", serially promoting rampant moral hazard, with his kneejerk response to each crisis laying seeds for a bigger subsequent crisis, right up to the point the entire global finanical system nearly evaporated overnight.
That's what I call Tough Love, brother!
My first year economics professor was a huge Greenspan fan. That was my first clue she was a ProgLib.
[...] Read the original here: » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government [...]
Greenspan is a Republican, for whatever that's worth. Politically speaking though, Greenspan is primarily pro-Greenspan. He still surfaces periodically after each crisis outbreak to testify to the effect that it's not his fault and it couldn't have been avoided. As the saying goes, Fed chairmen are supposedly the guy who takes away the punch bowl once the party gets going. With Greenspan, it's more like he busted open the liquor cabinet ,hauled out barrels of tequila, and kept the doors open 24×7.
Tough Love, great post!!….. I've been wondering how these people getting the home credits for
8,000 dollars are going to end up…..Did the government make sure they'll be able to pay their
mortgages?…I wonder if a lot of them went over their heads….Too many people have no idea about
budgeting…they had their mommies and daddies bail them out, and when Mom & Dad can't
do it anymore, they turn to the government…This crap wasn't started overnight, it took a while to get
here….We left people with the impression that they "deserve" everything….Just listen to the
commercials, most of them have the word "deserve" embedded in them somewhere…People have
to learn that they don't deserve s**t unless they are willing to work for it!!!
If the bankers were "making money off the poor", then they were just following the orders of the democratic congress.The same democratic congress that 'champions' the poor class' struggle…go figure!
Sounds like this group is responsible for the housing bubble, and they walked away with billions in their bulging pockets. Gee, what nice people to whom our politicos bow and grovel. Didn't BO do the same when he went to CA during the 2008 campaign to beg money?
We can't be broke, we keep hiring federal workers. Since it only takes 20 full time real employees to pay for one government worker, we know that with all the jobs Obama has created we are in great shape.
Stop the looters from driving us over the edge of the cluff! I closed my company and am on Strike, coverted my assets to metals and am watiting until the looters are no longer in power. My kids, will wait, I will no longer fuel the fire they are burning down our society with. I beg all of you to do the same. Do not help the looters.
I often wondered during the Greenspan Regime at the FED exactly WHO was setting Economic Policy? Was it Ol' Al, or Andrea Mitchell?
[...] here: » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government This entry was posted in Books and tagged 6th-2010, intense, website-uses. Bookmark the permalink. [...]
[...] » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government [...]
I guess you have no clue about the rate of obesity and diabetes in the poor. You every think that these health problems just may be attributed to the 3 dollar happy meal the kids are constantly being feed? That being said Fast food, payday lending, variable rate mortgages etc… are all about personal responsibility.
I have paid plenty of stupid tax in my life and have yet to throw a pity party
"nowhere in the book does Mr. Rivlin ever lay out a very simple argument: that borrowers constitute half the transaction"
Half?
Did the big, mean lenders go door-to-door, shotgun wedding style, forcing people to march straight down to the banks with their hands up, I mean out?
How did people borrow the money, if they didn't ask for it in the first place?
Did it come in the mail, like the million or so I win every week from PCH ?
“made money off the poor” …. reminds me of Cash For Clunkers.
[...] » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government [...]
Thanks for the review. The book sounds like progressive crap, where lenders are thieves and borrowers victims. I hawked my rifle a time or two when I was in college and was glad to be able to. Just as gambling could be considered to be a tax on the stupid, lenders (even pawn shops) have every right to "tax" anyone who knowingly signs a binding contract with them. They provide a service.
Is this guy related/married to Alice Rivlin, the first CBO director who bashed Reaganomics? Anyone?
How dare you expect adult responsiblility from adults?!
No kidding we are broke and God bless my grand kids that will inherit this mess. And, the economics challenged morons in the Obama state sponsored media haven't a clue. They chirp scripted garbage. Too many in this country are only as smart as Oprah's vacuous utterances and the witless minions in the MSM and that's as dumb as it gets in life.
Every elect counts. Hopefully the stupid can't be herded to the polls by the Dems forever.
[...] » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government [...]
[...] » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government [...]
Kevin, according to a google search it looks like this guy isn't related to
Alice Rivlin..She was married to another Rivlin, and they divorced…I
didn't look further, so I don't know if she had a son or not…..
I couldn't "Bing" anything solid either–thanks, Cardon. I guess I'm going to have to get used to the idea of using more than one search engine. I think I smell a rat on this one, though.
Ah… Another critical comment from a piss-poor reader. Perhaps you missed where I stated:
"Mc Donald's is far from my favorite, and I don't recommend it as a regular part of a healthy diet, but they do offer food for a very low price."
Does anybody force them to eat it? You do know that Mickey D's does offer bottled water as a substitute for sugary, carbonated beverages, don't you?
Ever known someone who is genuinely poor? Ever been up against it financially? I have. Sometimes a payday advance is the best alternative. Sometimes a title loan on a beater car is necessary. Walk in the shoes of an otherwise responsible person who is not so well off, try to manage the finances, and then get back to me…
I haven't read the book, but based on the review it sounds like another altruist oriented, big business/anti-capitalist rag.
We are essentially in agreement. You must understand that there is a difference between responsible and legal payday lenders, pawnbrokers, et al and irresponsible and illegal lenders. The bad apples need to be run out of town. Regulation is appropriate, as long as it is not over-regulation.
And you can't side with the author unless you've read the book. Did you?
I am not a fan of government intrusion in our lives, but I think every state should mandate a senior-year of high school course in personal finance.
GaltFan, as you quoted, context is important. It is in your comment, as well. I was making the point that the author spends an entire book trashing payday loans. The benefit of them to a responsible user is credit when needed to obtain a good or service. The downside is they are chased by a collection agency to repay a legitimate debt. And the author thinks this is the most awful thing ever.
My point is that he is wasting his time, and is hypocritical. Liquor offers no benefit whatsoever to anyone using it, even a responsible user. The downside of irresponsible usage is alcoholism, drunk driving, domestic abuse, health issues, and so on. McDonald's may provide short-tern benefiit of sating one's hunger, but repeated irresponsible usage leads to enormous health problems.
I'm not saying ban alcohol or fast food. I'm saying the author presents a problem without context.
[...] » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government [...]
[...] » Book Review: Broke U.S.A. – Big Government [...]
Gentle Readers,
Another excellent column by Mr. Meyers, and it's got me thinking:
When Mr. Rivlin wrote this book, I wonder if he got a cash advance from an Agency or Publisher? Is that a form of payday loan? Are Agency fee's and commissions a form of interest?
For example: If Mr. Rivlin wrote a book without a publishers contract, then sold it, he might earn twice as much – however, without the cash advance from the publisher, how can he afford to take time from earning a living to write the book?
There may be similarities between writing & motion picture production and payday loans.
If anyone has any thoughts, please post them.
Kindest Regards to all,
John Lepant Brighton CO
[...] Check out the full review of “Broke U.S.A.” here. [...]
Sure. Look, read the book and shoot me a note. We can discuss.
This otherwise fair review was marred for me by the fact that Meyers never acknowleges that he was interviewed for the book and that his quotes appear within. I expected to see this disclosure and was disappointed that it did not appear.
[...] Book Review: Broke USABig Government (blog)Nor does he ever once mention the litany of non-industry-funded studies that support the cash advance industry. There are several glaring omissions or … [...]
REVIEWS ON THE HOTTEST ELECTRONICS OUT…
GET THE LATEST REVIEWS ON THE HOTTEST ELECTRONICS OUT!…
~~WEBSITES~MOBILE PHONE APPS~WEBDESIGN~SEO~~…
THIS WEBDESIGN COMPANY DOES IT ALL…..
REVIEW IT BEFORE YOU BUY IT!…
REVIEW THE HOTTEST ELECTRONICS BEFORE YOU BUY THEM!…
Superb website…
[...]always a big fan of linking to bloggers that I love but don’t get a lot of link love from[...]……
minecraft skins Thanks once statesman for sharing this online. I certainly worshipped every bit of it….
Thanks once statesman for sharing this online. I certainly worshipped every bit of it….
Potato And Leek Soup It’s a advantageous disgrace you don’t hold a lot money add! I’d definitely cater money for this marvellous webpage! That i imply for the reading existence i’ll be bookmarking unitedly with including an individual’s Give that ins…
It’s a advantageous disgrace you don’t hold a lot money add! I’d definitely cater money for this marvellous webpage! That i imply for the reading existence i’ll be bookmarking unitedly with including an individual’s Give that instrument my prizewinning…
phone reverse call lookup Great post. I was checking continuously this blog and I am impressed! Very useful info specially the last part
I care for such info much. I was looking for this certain info for a very long time. Thank you and good luck….
Great post. I was checking continuously this blog and I am impressed! Very useful info specially the last part
I care for such info much. I was looking for this certain info for a very long time. Thank you and good luck….
puppy breeders The model of these blogging engines and CMS platforms is the lack of limitations and repose of use that allows developers to apply tasteful proportion and ‘skin’ the in much a way that with less sweat one would never request what it is…
The model of these blogging engines and CMS platforms is the lack of limitations and repose of use that allows developers to apply tasteful proportion and ‘skin’ the in much a way that with less sweat one would never request what it is making the parce…
You must be logged in to post a comment.