Consumer lending corp is a national consumer loan company


Ethics Factual Scenario

Consumer Lending Corp. is a national consumer loan company whose shares are traded on the NYSE. It conducts business through local loan offices throughout the nation. It borrows the funds it uses to lend to consumers by selling commercial paper (in the form of promissory notes secured by the underlying consumer loans) to large institutional investors. The cost of acquiring these funds is substantially affected by the delinquency rate of the underlying consumer loans. Corporate management has determined that corporate profits are maximized by a low delinquency rate, and has made that a primary goal of the company. A consumer loan is deemed delinquent if no payment is made within any 90-day period. Any such payment, even a partial payment no matter how small qualifies to keep the loan off the delinquency list.

Local office managers can earn up to a 20% end-of-year bonus based on the total aggregate amount of loans generated by the office, and based on the delinquency rate. State and regional managers also receive bonuses based on these criteria. Many office managers, as a result of this bonus structure, require their loan officers to pressure customers to borrow more money than they need or can reasonably repay on a timely basis.

Further, when these loans become 60 days delinquent, managers instruct their collection staff to use aggressive (albeit legal) collection techniques to pressure debtors to make at least a partial minimum payment before the 90 day delinquency date. Collection tactics frequently include initiating legal action at a cost to the company far in excess of the loan payments that are generated by the litigation. Simply put, managers do not care how much the collection activity costs the company so long as an account is kept off the delinquency list. Corporate management does not penalize managers for the high cost of collection because of the savings in costs of borrowing money in the commercial paper market.

The national consumer finance industry has recently been criticized for aggressive lending and collection practices. Several states and the United States Congress are actively considering passing legislation to implement more regulation of the industry to prevent the more onerous lending and collection tactics. The company has initiated a review of its lending and collection practices, and invited comment and participation from all levels of management.

Direction

You are a local manager that directly reports to a state manager. Your state manager has asked you to prepare an analysis of current practices. Discuss who the stakeholders are. Discuss whether the current practices should continue as is using the Ethical Leader's Decision Tree presented in the text. Discuss the ethical school you chose to determine if the current practices are ethical. Discuss whether long term benefits of reforming the current practices would be better for shareholders than the short-term profits of continuing the current practices.
Important Guidelines

Your score will be determined by evaluation of your substantive content. Your analysis and solutions as applicable must be based on the principles of law presented in the text and on the course site--not merely on your opinions. You must describe how application of the principles of law to the key facts supports your determination of the issues. You need to show the reasoning behind your decision.

The length of your response has no bearing on your score. Most responses will be from one to three pages.
Key facts are those facts that determine if the principles of law are met. You do not need to repeat the factual scenario. Doing so does not meet the requirement of recognizing the key facts. You must still demonstrate you recognize those key facts.
Use FIRAC to analyze this case.

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Dissertation: Consumer lending corp is a national consumer loan company
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