Financial pain points for older consumers: a look at the cfpb complaint database
Financial pain points for older consumers: a look at the cfpb complaint database"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
Ten years after its creation, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) complaint database serves as a powerful tool for individuals to file complaints about a financial product or
service, to see that their voices are heard, and in some cases to obtain relief. Its publicly available data makes it an important tool for stakeholders including policy makers, regulators
and financial companies seeking to improve their product design. Getty Images This report examines complaints filed with the CFPB from individuals self-reporting as older adults, largely
focused on the time period from January 1, 2018, through June 30, 2021. It concludes that older adults submit complaints to the CFPB about a wide range of financial products, with
particularly frequent concerns about credit reporting, mortgages, credit cards, bank accounts, and debt collection. In addition, the number of complaints in most product areas has increased
over time. Since 2018, the largest share of older adult complaints have concerned credit reporting, with about one-quarter of all complaints in this category, which includes a wide range of
personal consumer reports that may be used for banking, employment, insurance, or other commercial purposes, as well as companies that offer credit repair services. Meanwhile, credit or
prepaid card complaints have grown as a share of older adult complaints in recent years, forming the second largest category for 2020 (at 23 percent) and the third largest category in the
first six months of 2021 (19 percent). Older adults’ complaints about debt collection have declined somewhat in recent years as a relative share of all complaints, from 17 percent in 2018 to
12 percent in 2020 and early 2021. Complaints about banking products such as checking or savings accounts have ranged from 9 percent to 13 percent between 2018 and early 2021, placing them
in fifth place for the first three years and narrowly overtaking debt collection for fourth place in the first half of 2021. A smaller share of complaints deal with other product areas such
as money transfers, payday and title loans, student loans, and vehicle loans. After a complaint is filed with the CFPB, it is then sent to the financial company mentioned in that complaint.
The company has a chance to verify it, then must investigate and provide an initial response within 15 days as well as a final response within 60 days. In roughly 15 percent to 22 percent of
all complaints per year, the customer making the complaint receives some type of relief from the company. Each year, 7 percent to 9 percent of complaints result in monetary relief, and an
additional 7 percent to 14 percent of complaints result in nonmonetary relief, which may include actions such as stopping collections calls and correcting account information or documents.
Between January 2012 and June 2021, a total of 9,742 older adult complaints resulted in monetary relief, and 13,199 resulted in nonmonetary relief. These reflect more than 18 percent of
known complaints made to the CFPB by older adults during this time period. The CFPB and other stakeholders should expand awareness of the complaint portal and its potential to community
organizations, researchers, and advocates. This would increase both the number of complaints received and their value. Given the limitations of demographic data collection from the complaint
portal, the CFPB should also explore ways to enhance public complaint reporting and analysis based on age and other demographic factors to identify particular areas of concern for various
communities. Otherwise, concerns frequently raised by older adults, or among people of a particular race or ethnicity, for example, might be overlooked.
Trending News
Video: Awkward moment lawyer is caught having sex during Zoom meetingAdvertisement TOP VIDEOS Video: Get them back to the office! People left red-faced after being caught on Zoom in some ...
Video 'Big Little Lies' star Laura Dern teases possible return to 'Jurassic Park' - ABC NewsABC NewsVideoLiveShowsShopLog InStream onReality TV stars pardoned SpaceX launch LatestLatestLiverpool parade ramming 'D...
Typical wealth of people in france revealed: where do you fall?FRANCE IS SAID TO BE AMONG THE MOST WELL-OFF COUNTRIES IN THE WORLD, WITH A HIGHER MEDIAN WEALTH PER PERSON THAN, FOR EX...
2 ten commandments pleas rejected by courtA federal appeals court rejected two requests from the chief justice of Alabama’s Supreme Court to lift an order to remo...
Nuclear export of adenovirus e4orf6 protein is necessary for its ability to antagonize apoptotic activity of bh3-only proteinsABSTRACT The adenovirus E4orf6 is a viral oncoprotein known to cooperate with the E1A gene product in transforming prima...
Latests News
Financial pain points for older consumers: a look at the cfpb complaint databaseTen years after its creation, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) complaint database serves as a powerful ...
Accused jnu teacher highly influential, say complainantsNew Delhi, March 21 (IANS) Five of the eight JNU students, who have accused a senior professor of molestation, on Wednes...
Kauai pact act registration and community call event | va pacific islands health care | veterans affairsHonolulu , HI — Honolulu, Hawaii -- VA Pacific Islands Health Care System (VAPIHCS) will hold a PACT Act Registration an...
Girls outshine boys in cbse class 12 resultsGirls outshone boys in the CBSE Class XII results announced today with Meghna Srivastava, from a Noida school, topping t...
404 errorBriton wins right to be on EU electoral roll in historic French court ruling The order is the first of its kind since Br...