How is a credit scoring model developed?
To develop a model, a creditor selects a random sample of its customers, or
a sample of similar customers if their sample is not large enough, and analyzes
it statistically to identify characteristics that relate to creditworthiness.
Then, each of these factors is assigned a weight based on how strong a predictor
it is of who would be a good credit risk. Each creditor may use its own credit
scoring model, different scoring models for different types of credit, or a
generic model developed by a credit scoring company.
Under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, a credit scoring system may not use
certain characteristics like -- race, sex, marital status, national origin,
or religion -- as factors. However, creditors are allowed to use age in properly
designed scoring systems. But any scoring system that includes age must give
equal treatment to elderly applicants.