Credit Scoring or Credit Boring: Will Chinese Bureaus Dive too Deep?

credit score

credit score

Credit scoring, particularly the FICO Score, is a fascinating topic.  As a credit underwriter, good scoring can make decisions a breeze.  You plug acceptable ranges, and interest rate parameters, and let the decision making proceed.  Want to increase throughput, tweak a few numbers and away you go.

In the backend, use the same scoring function to decide who should be called, how many times, and when.

Today’s read in Wired talks about the Chinese version of scoring, which takes the empirical rating system to a new, creepy level.

Now, call me a traditionalist, and I have been out of the dating market for 35 years, but do we want an all-purpose scoring process that covers dating?  I suppose there could be some benefit in ferreting out the good, bad and ugly, but this takes the process a little too far.

Maybe the rubric of “credit scoring” needs to be recast as a government compliance rating, either way, thank heavens for US codification of Fair Credit Reporting and similar rules in other mature economies.

We did a deep dive on alternative scoring a few years back and though there is some relevance, there was little incremental value, particularly in mature markets.  But, this seems invasive.

Overview by Brian Riley, Director, Credit Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

Exit mobile version