Over the past few years, Jordan has undergone an important legal and economic transformation by reducing its reliance on the imprisonment of debtors as a means of debt collection. This shift has sparked considerable debate. Some view it as a progressive reform aligned with international best practices and the protection of individual rights and freedoms, while others fear it may lead to higher default rates, weaker repayment discipline, and reduced confidence in commercial and financial transactions.
The real question, however, is
not whether debtors should be imprisoned, but rather: what is the most
effective mechanism for ensuring financial obligations are honored? Can credit
history replace imprisonment as a tool for financial discipline and creditor
protection?
In reality, debtor imprisonment
is no longer the primary debt recovery mechanism in most advanced economies.
Modern states concluded decades ago that imprisonment—besides being costly and
burdensome on public finances—does not generate income, does not help debtors
repay their obligations, and may even worsen the problem by preventing them
from working and producing. Consequently, most countries replaced this approach
with what may be described as a “long-term economic penalty,” embodied in
credit history and credit scoring systems.
In the United States, Canada, the
United Kingdom, Australia, and most European countries, individuals understand
that failure to meet their financial obligations will not result in
imprisonment. However, it will affect their credit reputation for many years,
potentially preventing them from obtaining a mortgage, car financing, credit
cards, commercial facilities, or funding for a new business venture. As a
result, repayment discipline shifts from fear of legal punishment to the desire
to preserve one's economic reputation.
This reflects what economists
often refer to as the internalization of costs and benefits, which is the
incorporation of future economic consequences into present decision-making.
Individuals repay their debts not because they fear prison, but because they
understand that default carries long-term economic costs.
International experience has
demonstrated the effectiveness of credit reporting and credit scoring systems.
Credit information systems have reduced lending risks, improved banks’ ability
to assess borrowers, expanded access to finance, lowered borrowing costs for
responsible customers, and helped curb excessive indebtedness. They have also
provided financial institutions with more accurate and equitable risk
management tools.
Today, a credit history is among
the most valuable economic assets an individual or business can possess. In
many advanced economies, banks do not begin by examining collateral; they first
review the applicant’s credit record. In some cases, the credit profile is more
important than the value of the collateral itself. After all, the primary role
of a bank is to provide financing and financial assets—not to trade in land and
real estate.
In Jordan, institutional
attention to this issue began with the enactment of the Credit Information Law
No. 15 of 2010, which established the legal framework for specialized credit
information companies. Subsequently, the Central Bank of Jordan granted the
first credit bureau license to CRIF Jordan, which commenced operations in 2016.
Since then, CRIF has collected
data from banks, finance companies, leasing companies, microfinance
institutions, and a number of service providers. It produces credit reports and
credit scores that assist financial institutions in evaluating clients before
extending financing.
Undoubtedly, this represents a
significant improvement compared with the situation a decade ago. Banks now
possess more comprehensive information about borrowers, and lending decisions
increasingly rely on objective data rather than personal judgment or relationships.
Citizens can also access their own credit reports and gain a clearer
understanding of their financial standing.
Yet an important question
remains: Has Jordan’s credit information system become a genuine substitute for
debtor imprisonment? The answer, at least for now, appears to be: not entirely.
For the system to function effectively, credit history must become a decisive
factor in economic life. Citizens must recognize that any default will directly
affect their future ability to borrow, invest, or obtain financial facilities.
Likewise, all major financial and commercial institutions should actively
participate in information sharing and genuinely incorporate credit scores into
their decision-making processes.
At the same time, many Jordanians
remain unaware of the importance of their credit records, and the practical
impact of credit history on many economic decisions remains more limited than
in advanced economies. This suggests that Jordan’s transition from a culture of
legal sanctions to one based on credit reputation is not yet complete.
Another important issue concerns
the structure of the credit reporting market itself: Is it appropriate for
Jordan to have only one credit bureau? There are strong arguments in favor of a
single provider. A unified database reduces inconsistencies, lowers operational
costs, and facilitates regulatory oversight by the Central Bank. Furthermore,
Jordan’s relatively small market may not be large enough to sustain multiple
competing firms.
However, the existence of only
one credit bureau also raises legitimate concerns regarding competition,
innovation, service quality, and even potential monopoly effects. In the United
States, for example, several major credit bureaus operate simultaneously,
including Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Competition among these firms has
improved data quality, fostered innovation, and reduced costs for users.
This does not necessarily mean
Jordan immediately requires three or four credit bureaus. Nonetheless, it is
reasonable to ask whether the Jordanian market has matured sufficiently to
support one or more competitors to CRIF in the future. If market size is
considered insufficient, policymakers may even consider supporting the
emergence of another provider to encourage competition and innovation.
Another issue of equal importance
is the responsibility of the credit bureau itself. The success of the system
depends not only on collecting data, but also on ensuring its accuracy,
comprehensiveness, timeliness, and the ability of individuals and firms to
challenge and correct errors. A credit reporting system can only be considered
fair when information is accurate, up to date, transparent, and subject to
review.
The importance of credit history
extends beyond consumer lending and banking. It is directly linked to a broader
issue: the economy’s ability to finance investment through leasing and movable
assets financing.
Modern economies do not rely
solely on real estate as collateral. Increasingly, financing is based on
machinery, equipment, vehicles, inventories, accounts receivable, and other
movable assets. This is why advanced economies have developed comprehensive legal
frameworks allowing such assets to serve as collateral.
Jordan attempted to move in this
direction through the enactment of the Financial Leasing Law in 2002, the
development of legislation governing movable assets, and the establishment of a
registry for security interests in movable property. The objective was to
enable small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to access financing without
owning high-value real estate.
The philosophy of financial
leasing is both simple and economically powerful. Instead of paying the full
price of machinery, equipment, or vehicles upfront, a leasing company acquires
the asset and leases it to the client over an extended period in exchange for
regular payments, often with an option to purchase at the end of the contract.
This allows entrepreneurs to
allocate scarce capital toward expanding production rather than purchasing
assets outright. A manufacturer, for example, can invest in expanding a factory
rather than tying up resources in trucks or equipment. The model has proven
highly successful across North America, Europe, and Asia because it enables
businesses to acquire productive assets without requiring substantial liquidity
or real estate collateral.
Despite having the legal
framework in place for many years, Jordan’s financial leasing market remains
significantly smaller than its potential. Likewise, the use of movable assets
as collateral remains limited compared with international practice.
The reasons appear to extend
beyond legislation itself. They involve broader issues related to risk
management, credit information systems, and the efficiency of legal enforcement
mechanisms. In advanced economies, leasing companies depend on two critical
pillars: comprehensive credit information that allows accurate borrower
assessment, and efficient legal procedures that enable the rapid recovery of
leased assets in cases of default.
If credit history systems remain
incomplete or have limited practical impact, risk perceptions rise. As a
result, financing becomes more expensive, and institutions become less willing
to expand leasing and movable asset financing. In some cases, leasing companies
continue to require real estate collateral because they fear that leased
equipment may be sold or transferred without adequate legal deterrence.
Ironically, Jordan has undertaken
three major reforms over the past decade in the right direction: the
establishment of a credit bureau, the creation of a movable collateral
registry, and the reduction of debtor imprisonment. Yet these reforms continue
to operate with varying degrees of integration.
Credit history has not yet become
a decisive factor across all financial transactions. Financing based on movable
assets remains below its potential, and many SMEs continue to rely primarily on
real estate collateral.
Indeed, one of the reasons
advanced economies were able to abandon debtor imprisonment is that they
developed strong and credible alternatives. A borrower in the United States or
the United Kingdom may not face imprisonment for default, but they face an immediate
loss of creditworthiness, difficulty obtaining future financing, and efficient
enforcement against pledged assets.
If traditional sanctions are
removed without strengthening these alternatives, financial markets may
experience higher risks, weaker confidence, and increased financing costs.
For Jordan to successfully
transition from a philosophy of debtor imprisonment to one of credit
discipline, the entire ecosystem must function effectively. Credit history,
financial leasing, movable collateral registries, and SME financing are all
interconnected components of the same system.
If these components operate in an
integrated manner, Jordan will be able to expand access to finance, reduce
excessive dependence on real estate collateral, increase investment and
productivity, and create more jobs. If they continue to function only partially
or independently, a substantial portion of their economic benefits will remain
unrealized.
Ultimately, the issue is no
longer whether debtors should be imprisoned. The real challenge is building a
modern economy based on information, transparency, credit reputation, and
productive finance.
More than a decade after the
enactment of the Credit Information Law and nearly ten years after the launch
of CRIF Jordan, perhaps the time has come for a comprehensive national
evaluation of the experience. What has been achieved? What remains unfinished?
Has credit history truly become the primary mechanism of financial discipline
in Jordan? And, have financial leasing and movable asset financing fulfilled
their intended role?
The answers to these questions
will largely determine Jordan’s ability to move from an economy dependent on
legal sanctions and traditional real estate collateral toward one driven by
information, reputation, and efficient capital allocation. After all, modern
economies are not built through prisons; they are built through information,
trust, and transparency.
* The writer is a former
Jordanian Minister of State for Economic Affairs.
Published in Jordan Times/, 15 June, 2026
https://jordantimes.com/opinion/yusuf-mansur/from-debtors-imprisonment-to-credit-history-has-jordan-completed-the-transition
No comments:
Post a Comment