谁在支付所有这些费用?银行账户和信用卡费用的实证分析

Oz Shy, J. Stavins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

银行收取各种各样的账户费用,信用卡发卡机构也收取与信用卡使用有关的各种费用。利用2021年美国消费者代表性日记调查的详细数据,我们调查了低收入消费者和黑人消费者是否更有可能支付银行账户或信用卡费用,以及支付此类费用的支付行为如何变化。我们发现支付几种类型的银行账户和信用卡费用的概率与消费者的人口统计属性和支付行为相关。黑人消费者在银行账户上支付透支费或低余额费,或在信用卡上支付滞纳金或现金预支费的比例高于白人消费者支付这些费用的比例。我们发现,当我们在回归中保持收入和账户余额不变时,低收入消费者更有可能支付透支费,而黑人消费者更有可能支付任何银行账户费。然而,当控制收入时,我们发现种族效应小于汇总统计。JEL分类:G21, G5, D14
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Who Is Paying All These Fees? An Empirical Analysis of Bank Account and Credit Card Fees
Banks impose a variety of account fees, and credit card issuers impose a variety of fees related to card usage. Using detailed data from a 2021 representative diary survey of US consumers, we investigate whether lower-income consumers and Black consumers are more likely to pay bank account or credit card fees, and how payment behavior varies depending on paying such fees. We find that the probability of paying several types of bank account and credit card fees is correlated with consumers’ demographic attributes and payment behavior. The percentage of Black consumers who pay overdraft or low-balance fees on their bank accounts or pay late fees or cash-advance fees on their credit cards is higher than the percentage of White consumers who pay those fees. We find that lower-income consumers were significantly more likely to pay overdraft fees, and Black consumers were significantly more likely to pay any bank account fee when we hold income and account balances constant in the regressions. However, when controlling for income, we find that the race effect was smaller than in the summary statistics. JEL Classifications: G21, G5, D14
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