ChatterBank5 mins ago
Wonga And The Church
38 Answers
Is the Church of England in danger of suddenly becoming effective and relevant?
or is it just talk?
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/bu siness- 2343395 5
or is it just talk?
http://
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No best answer has yet been selected by jake-the-peg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It flies in the face of Christian principles - but the church has a habit of ignoring those when it suits. Fundamentally the church is a business – and a very wealthy one – so it comes as no surprise that it’s venturing into new ground – and if it offers far lower rates of interest, there’s no reason it can’t succeed. I do think companies that prey on the vulnerable by lending money at extortionate rates of interest need to be scrutinised – and regulated.
The EIAG has been in place for sometime and high rate lenders have always been an object of derision. This is one of the areas - perhaps not know or overlooked - that religion might have influence on national policy, since the EIAG have long set out to promote ethical investment and even provide ledning investment to companies involved in conventional weaponry!
I think factor - that's the point - it doesn't have to be a profitable business - it can be run as not for profit and massively under cut them.
Oxfam (and others) has a similar model - they run their shops as a business but the profits support their work.
I'm interested to hear more em but I don't think so - sounds as if the idea right now is to support existing credit unions with advice locations and support - more of a partnership rather than a stand alone CofE bank
Oxfam (and others) has a similar model - they run their shops as a business but the profits support their work.
I'm interested to hear more em but I don't think so - sounds as if the idea right now is to support existing credit unions with advice locations and support - more of a partnership rather than a stand alone CofE bank
I believe he is advocating that the Church should invest in Credit Unions. These offer cheaper credit than high street shops and payday loan companies.
Investment from the Church will help credit unions expand and will take some trade away from these companies that charge high rates of interest to people who can least afford it.
He is Stockport Credit union's comparison for buying household goods compared with a Crazy Georges type shop.
http:// tinypic .com/r/ 20pg7c/ 5
Investment from the Church will help credit unions expand and will take some trade away from these companies that charge high rates of interest to people who can least afford it.
He is Stockport Credit union's comparison for buying household goods compared with a Crazy Georges type shop.
http://
a credit card with Jesus face on the front, can see it now. Sorry that is also a bit of levity, no i don't think it is something that they should be involved in, even giving advice. I would rather all those who lend money, be it bank, mortgage company, or credit companies were much better regulated.
I get stuff from the bank on a regular basis, on taking our a large loan, even though i claim benefits.
I get stuff from the bank on a regular basis, on taking our a large loan, even though i claim benefits.
> "it doesn't have to be a profitable business - it can be run as not for profit and massively under cut them."
I agree, jake, that it can be run as not-for-profit but I don't believe it can 'massively undercut' the Wongas of this world. If these companies were making excessive profits I still feel other lenders would have stepped in and through competition driven the loan rates down. Credit unions are already available but haven't made much impact and probably attract a different client base anyway.
Good luck to the Church or anyone else who feels they can do it but I think it's a risky market - there will be defaulters and losses may be incurred, there is always the risk of bad publicity ("church hounds single mum of 7 to court for failing to repay £200 loan") and there is the risk of regulatory fines.
I agree, jake, that it can be run as not-for-profit but I don't believe it can 'massively undercut' the Wongas of this world. If these companies were making excessive profits I still feel other lenders would have stepped in and through competition driven the loan rates down. Credit unions are already available but haven't made much impact and probably attract a different client base anyway.
Good luck to the Church or anyone else who feels they can do it but I think it's a risky market - there will be defaulters and losses may be incurred, there is always the risk of bad publicity ("church hounds single mum of 7 to court for failing to repay £200 loan") and there is the risk of regulatory fines.
The phrase he uses is
// He said the Church could do more to help non-profit lenders to compete with payday firms //
That does not mean the church will offer credit. It means investing in more ethical non profit lenders.
The church definitely should be doing this. It is helping the poor at its most basic level, helping them keep more of what little money they have.
// He said the Church could do more to help non-profit lenders to compete with payday firms //
That does not mean the church will offer credit. It means investing in more ethical non profit lenders.
The church definitely should be doing this. It is helping the poor at its most basic level, helping them keep more of what little money they have.