Publication | Open Access
Financial Literacy and Subprime Mortgage Delinquency: Evidence from a Survey Matched to Administrative Data
335
Citations
28
References
2010
Year
The precise cause of the massive defaults and foreclosures in the U.S. subprime mortgage market remains unclear. The study examines whether borrowers' numerical ability influences subprime mortgage delinquency. The authors surveyed 2006–2007 subprime borrowers on financial literacy and cognitive ability, then linked responses to mortgage characteristics and repayment data.
The exact cause of the massive defaults and foreclosures in the U.S. subprime mortgage market is still unclear. This paper investigates whether a particular aspect of borrowers' financial literacy - their numerical ability - may have played a role. We measure several aspects of financial literacy and cognitive ability in a survey of subprime mortgage borrowers who took out mortgages in 2006 or 2007 and match these measures to objective data on mortgage characteristics and repayment performance. We find a large and statistically significant negative correlation between numerical ability and various measures of delinquency and default. Foreclosure starts are approximately two-thirds lower in the group with the highest measured level of numerical ability compared with the group with the lowest measured level. The result is robust to controlling for a broad set of sociodemographic variables and not driven by other aspects of cognitive ability or the characteristics of the mortgage contracts. Our results raise the possibility that limitations in certain aspects of financial literacy played an important role in the subprime mortgage crisis.
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