From Deseret News archives:
No LDS bankruptcy link?
Study says nonmembers have more money woes
In fact, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints fare slightly better than the general population when it comes to filing for bankruptcy, a study published last week in the Suffolk University Law Review said.
The study was conducted by two Harvard Law School graduates both LDS and is the first report to address whether Latter-day Saints cause or contribute to Utah's elevated bankruptcy rate.
"Our findings show that all Utahns, including Mormons, are suffering from an enormous bankruptcy glut, but Mormons are not experiencing it any more than any other Utahn," the study said. "Our data reveal that in Utah non-Mormons are 4.6 percent more likely than their Mormon counterparts to find themselves in bankruptcy court."
The study said that in a group of 1,000 randomly selected LDS members in Utah, 11.6 would have been involved in a bankruptcy. "If a similar group of 1,000 non-Mormons were assembled, 12.1 would have been involved," the study said. "In other words, had Mormons filed at the same rate as the rest of the state, about 300 more Utahns would have gone bankrupt in 2004."
Yet James Wright, co-author of the study and a Salt Lake City real estate attorney, said while Latter-day Saints make up approximately 62.4 percent of Utah's population, "our data show they constitute only 61.3 percent of debtors in bankruptcy."
Were the state's predominant religion driving bankruptcy rates, the percentage of Latter-day Saints filing would be much higher, about 70 to 80 percent, Wright said.
"If Mormons were causing bankruptcy in the state, you would expect to find that they were very much overrepresented in the bankruptcy court," Wright said. "It is clear that Mormons are not overrepresented, bottom line."
At one filing per 167.4 households, Utah fell to the 10th spot in personal bankruptcy filings among all 50 states and the District of Columbia for the 12 months ended Dec. 31, 2006, according to a report earlier this year by the American Bankruptcy Institute, a Virginia-based research group.
From 2002 through 2004, Utah ranked first in the nation in households per filing.
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