Risk based pricing
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Risk based pricing is the practice in the financial services industry to charge different interest rates on the same loan to different people, depending on their credit score and other factors which make it seem like they are more likely to not pay back the loan. Those with worse scores have a higher interest rate, those with better scores have a lower one. In most financial services companies and products, the credit score is by far the major element used to make this rate decision, income and assests are almost totally ignored (income however is used to decide if the loan is too high for the person to afford). The idea of the process is to avoid the tragedy of the commons, which happen if everyone had the same interest rate, since those who were less likely to default are in effect subsidizing those who do default. In risk based pricing, those who are more likely to default help pay for their own costs to the company, while those who have flawless records get supposedly cheaper interest rates.
This system has many critics. The main criticism is that it makes shopping around for interest rates much more difficult. This is because its almost impossible to tell at first glance if you will be qualified to get the lowest rate advertised. Depending on how it is implemented within the company, critics sometimes see the practice as a form of bait and switch. Other critics say that it is unfair in general, because it creates a vicious cycle whereby the economically disenfranchised pay high interest rates which can continue to keep them disenfranchised.