Credit Scores and Inequality across the Life Cycle
Published Date
Copyright 2026
ISBN 9780226858357
DOI 10.1086/738953
You may be able to download this chapter for free via the Document Object Identifier.
Credit scores are a primary screening device for the allocation of credit, housing, and sometimes even employment. In the data, credit scores grow and fan out with age; at the same time, income and consumption inequality also increase with a cohort’s age. We postulate a simple model with hidden information to explore the joint determination of credit scores, income, and consumption over an individual’s lifetime which can replicate these empirical facts. We use the model to understand the role of technologies like big data or legal restrictions limiting information on certain adverse events like medical expenses intended to increase credit market access.
-
-
Copy CitationSatyajit Chatterjee, Dean Corbae, Kyle Dempsey, and José-Víctor Ríos-Rull, NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2025, volume 40 (University of Chicago Press, 2025), chap. 5, https://www.nber.org/books-and-chapters/nber-macroeconomics-annual-2025-volume-40/credit-scores-and-inequality-across-life-cycle.Download Citation
-
Related
Published From Paper
-
Working Paper
Credit scores are a primary screening device for the allocation of credit, housing, and sometimes even employment. In...