The use of credit reports in employment decisions has recently become a controversial issue. It has been put up for debate whether or not making hiring decisions based on credit history could have a disparate impact on racial and ethnic minorities with the end result of hiring fewer minority applicants. A recent report from the Federal Reserve Board calls into question the generally held belief that hiring decisions based in part on credit histories have a disparate impact on racial and ethnic minorities. Rather than analyzing the potential disparate impact in hiring decisions, the October 12, 2010 report analyzed a parallel question: whether the use of credit scores in lending would have a disparate impact on applicants for loans. An important distinction between these two questions is that employment-purpose credit reports do not show a credit score; but they do show the types of information that credit bureaus use in their calculations of credit scores.
What makes the new report interesting for employers is:
We strongly urge that our clients have their equal employment opportunity lawyers review this paper (available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1726601) and the criteria they use for making decisions based on credit history.