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Working Paper
Prior Fraud Exposure and Precautionary Credit Market Behavior
This paper studies how past experiences with privacy shocks affect individuals’ take-up of precautionary behavior when faced with a new privacy shock in the context of credit markets. We focus on experiences with identity theft and data breaches, two kinds of privacy shocks that either directly lead to fraud or put an individual at an elevated risk of experiencing fraud. Using the announcement of the 2017 Equifax data breach, we show that individuals with either kind of prior fraud exposure were more likely to freeze their credit report and close credit card accounts than individuals with ...
Working Paper
Does Experience Matter? Past Fraud Experiences, Data Compromises, and Credit Market Behavior
We study how past experiences with fraud affect individuals’ likelihood of taking precautionary action in credit markets when faced with a new shock that raises their fraud risks. We focus on two kinds of past experiences with fraud: direct experience with fraud and a “near-miss” experience that increased fraud risk but did not directly lead to fraud. Using the 2017 Equifax data breach announcement, we show that individuals with either type of prior experience with fraud were more likely to take a precautionary action — freezing their credit report — than individuals with no prior ...