Saturday
Sep042004
Saturday, September 4, 2004 at 07:32PM
Credit reports have long been used to determine whether consumers can
get credit cards and mortgages, and the rate they'll have to pay on
them. But these reports -- and credit scores generated from them -- are
increasingly being applied to other things, from setting the price on
auto insurance to analyzing prospective tenants and screening job
applicants. Consumer activists argue that the system is unfair to many
Americans, especially those with little credit experience or with
blemished credit records. And some people have begun fighting back in
the courts. Credit reports are the records kept by credit agencies --
including Experian, Equifax and TransUnion -- that track the amount of
credit consumers have and whether they pay their bills on time. Scores
can be derived from the credit reports, either by the agencies
themselves or private companies that are customers, to reflect an
individual's creditworthiness. The best known is a FICO score, used
since the 1990s by banks and other lenders when they underwrite home
mortgages. One of the most contentious uses of credit reports is in
employment. [more ]