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How the Credit Reporting System "Works"
The credit reporting system is a business relationship between two
parties:
- independent agencies that collect credit information called
credit bureaus
- and merchants who pay for a copy of this credit information
on an as-needed basis. Credit bureaus refer to these merchants
who pay a fee for their service as subscribers. As with any business,
the main focus of the bureaus is to meet the needs of their customers,
the merchant subscribers (not you).
When you apply for credit with a local merchant,
the merchant turns to a credit bureau to obtain a copy of your "credit
reputation" to help him evaluate the risks in extending credit to
you. The bureau doesn't actually approve or deny your credit, but
rather supplies the merchant with your payment history as reported
by other subscribers with whom you have received credit. However,
the bureau will use a closely guarded secret formula to assign a
credit score to each individual based on the information in the
file. This information is the most significant factor in the merchant's
decision regarding your "ability and willingness" to meet your future
financial obligations. The merchant is counting on the credit bureau's
information to serve as a filter to help separate good credit risks
from poor risks.
The shortfall of this system is that the product,
you, has little clout in this relationship. The merchant's primary
motivation is to avoid bad credit risks, and the bureau makes a
profit by charging the merchant for helping him do that. The consumer
has no positive financial impact on the bureau. Thus, while you
are out of the loop, you are surrounded by it.
If that weren't enough, you also have to compete
against human nature. Without documentation of errors, the bureaus
are inclined to report information as reported by subscribers--assuming
the negative. After all, the merchant/subscriber is not going to
complain because he didn't like what he saw on your file and thus
didn't extend credit and didn't lose any money. Any losses for not
taking a risk are speculative and argumentative, certainly not tangible.
The only decisions that might draw criticism from the merchant are
the losses as a result of the bureau omitting some negative information
that would have caused the merchant to have declined extending credit.
This is not intended to make the credit bureaus appear
the great "evil empire" that some have made them out to be. They
are huge bureaucratic companies whose policies have evolved from
simple business economics and human nature. Every credit bureau
desires to maintain as accurate information as financially feasible,
but at the same time they realize the quality control limitations
dictated by competition and operating costs. And they realize that
if they do err, it is better to err on the negative side rather
than the positive--if they are going to serve their subscribers'
best interest. Although they want to develop as truthful a portrait
of your credit history as possible, human nature compels them to
give highest priority to recording any remarks that might be true
and might keep their customer-base from entering into a risky credit
arrangement. After all, that is their service, and nothing directly
impacts their bottom line any greater.
It's much like having a mechanic check out an automobile
before you make a decision to purchase it. The mechanic is put on
the spot. If he tells you it's a good car, and it breaks down on
you, then he looks bad. He'll never be burdened with your complaints
about the three he blackballed, only the one he okayed--if it should
break down on you.
Human nature compels him to go into the situation
looking for what's wrong, not what's right. You are about to make
a major financial decision based mainly on the information your
mechanic gives you. Similarly, the merchant may be making a comparable
investment based on the information provided by the bureau.
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