Blog Stuff

You're Welcome, Lauren Willis, But You're Not Going Anywhere

03/27/13

Lauren Willis has joined us for the last month as a guest blogger, and in her most recent post thanked us for allowing her to "use our soap box." You're very welcome, Lauren, but we really don't want you to leave.  We're happy to report that Lauren has agreed to add her voice to Credit Slips as one of our "Occasional" bloggers.

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Thank You Paige Skiba

03/06/13

TitleLoanOn behalf of eveyone at Credit Slips, I wanted to thank Professor Paige Skiba for spending

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Thank You Mark Weidemaier

03/01/13

Professor Mark Weidemaier of the University of North Carolina has been guest blogging with us since early November. Today's post on the Second Circuit's pari passu hearing in the NML litigation marked an end to his time with us.

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Welcome Back to Paige Skiba

02/24/13

It is always great to have our guests return, which makes me please to announced that Professor Paige Skiba of Vanderbilt University will be joining us for a few days. Paige has done a lot of interesting work on high-interest credit like payday lending and pawnshops. She promised to blog a little bit about her new paper with Jim Hawkins of the University of Houston on title loans.

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Technical Problems Yesterday

02/20/13

If you visited Credit Slips yesterday (February 19) and had problems loading the site, it was because our hosting service (Typepad) had some system-wide issues. Everything should be working now. Typepad status is always available here.

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Occasional Jason Kilborn

02/18/13

Long-time readers will remember Professor Jason Kilborn's guest-blogging stints. Jason focuses on comparative and international issues in the world of bankruptcy. This is always a perspective we sorely need here on the Slips, and we were wanting to get his voice back on the blog.

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Welcome to Lauren Willis

02/12/13

We're very excited to have Lauren Willis of Loyola Law School, Los Angeles, join us as a guest blogger. We have been trying to find a mutually convenient time for months, and schedules finally aligned. Professor Willis is perhaps best known for being a skeptic of the Pollyannish view that consumer education always helps, a topic on which she has published a series of articles.

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Blogging Like It's 2009 -- Now with Facebook!

01/08/13

It seemed time to catch up with the rest of the world. My kids tell me there is this thing called "Facebook" that might just catch on. We now have a Facebook page. Perhaps even better, you can "Like" or "Share" individual posts, or you can "Like" the whole blog from the button on the right. For Facebook neophytes like me, the difference between a "Like" and a "Share" is who sees your activity in Facebook.

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Putting the E(lliot) in Sovereign Debt Enforcement...

12/10/12

Until a month or so ago, you could have asked almost any economist or political scientist whether sovereign borrowers worry about legal enforcement, and, by way of answer, you would gotten a technical version of "Huh?" Academics disagree about why sovereigns repay loans, but almost no one thinks they do so to avoid being sued. So although bond investors are technically entitled to sue sovereign borrowers, there is no evidence that these formal legal entitlements actually impact the likelihood of repayment. That's why NML v.

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Comment Spam Fail

12/10/12

Every morning, I go through the list of comments and unpublish all the comment spam. Typically, the comment spam tries to engage with the blog content in what I can only suppose is an attempt to not look like spam. In this morning's comment queue was this gem that I had to share, purporting to be from "Best Financial Blog":

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