> Like, giving the customer a $500 loan at 300% interest that they may never be able to pay back so they end up in an endless cycle of debt.
If that's the percentage being charged and that's the best a person can do, that means that person has a very high chance of defaulting on the loan.
Which would explain why nobody else wants to lend to that person. With your regulations, that financial institution would not exist. You can't regulate people into losing money. They'll just shut down.
You've now deprived the person of a legal financial option of borrowing money. You think they won't borrow anyway? They will. From a loan shark. They'll go into the black market.
They'll end up paying more for that loan since the shark now needs to cover the legal risk involved and if they don't pay it back, they may end up with broken legs.
The same could be said about allowing poor people to seek treatment from unlicensed medical practitioners "If we don't give them our substandard medical care, they'll get it from underground providers that will be even worse".
Or let them be served by an unregulated transportation providers "Well yeah, our buses aren't safe, some of our drivers have suspended licenses, but if they don't ride with us, they'll ride with someone worse".
Just because there are worse alternatives is no reason for the government to sanction exploitative businesses.
> The same could be said about allowing poor people to seek treatment from unlicensed medical practitioners
No, it can't. Because they can always walk into a hospital and receive treatment, even if they have no capacity to pay. A hospital may not refuse treatment.
> Or let them be served by an unregulated transportation providers
Like Uber?
Interestingly enough, if an unregulated method of transportation becomes popular enough, it gets regulated, not regulated out of existence.
If that's the percentage being charged and that's the best a person can do, that means that person has a very high chance of defaulting on the loan.
Which would explain why nobody else wants to lend to that person. With your regulations, that financial institution would not exist. You can't regulate people into losing money. They'll just shut down.
You've now deprived the person of a legal financial option of borrowing money. You think they won't borrow anyway? They will. From a loan shark. They'll go into the black market.
They'll end up paying more for that loan since the shark now needs to cover the legal risk involved and if they don't pay it back, they may end up with broken legs.
How is that better?