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  2. Credit control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_Control

    Credit control has a number of sections that include - credit approval, credit limit approval, dispatch approvals as well as collection process. In a large business a credit process will be run by a senior manager and will include processes as such as Know Your Customer (KYC), account opening, approval of credit and credit limits (both in terms ...

  3. Credit management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_management

    Credit management is the process of granting credit, setting the terms on which it is granted, recovering this credit when it is due, and ensuring compliance with company credit policy, among other credit related functions.

  4. Diameter Credit-Control Application - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diameter_Credit-Control...

    Simple Debit/Credit; Balance checks; Price inquiries; The diameter credit control application does not specify which type units are bought/used and which items are charged. This is left to the service context that has to be specified separately, as is some of the semantics. Examples of units used/bought: Time; Upload/Download bytes; SMS (Text ...

  5. Control self-assessment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Control_self-assessment

    Some researchers have criticised control self-assessment as a flawed approach as the way risk is defined and measured is unsophisticated. In particular, control self-assessment may understate risk by not identifying extreme downside risk. An extreme downside risk is a highly improbable event that would have catastrophic consequences if it occurred.

  6. Credit analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_analysis

    One objective of credit analysis is to look at both the borrower and the lending facility being proposed and to assign a risk rating.The risk rating is derived by estimating the probability of default by the borrower at a given confidence level over the life of the facility, and by estimating the amount of loss that the lender would suffer in the event of default.

  7. Check sheet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Check_sheet

    Example checklist. While the check sheets discussed above are all for capturing and categorizing observations, the checklist is intended as a mistake-proofing aid when carrying out multi-step procedures, particularly during the checking and finishing of process outputs. This type of check sheet consists of the following:

  8. Criticism of credit scoring systems in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_credit...

    The concept of "credit invisibility" (a term used by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the CFPB [64]) is factored into this as there are many individuals who do not use or need credit (usually the elderly), avoid using credit, or avoid participating in the credit system. Being credit invisible puts consumers at a disadvantage. [25]

  9. Consumer Credit Act 1974 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_Credit_Act_1974

    Long title: An Act to establish for the protection of consumers a new system, administered by the Director General of Fair Trading, of licensing and other control of traders concerned with the provision of credit, or the supply of goods on hire or hire-purchase, and their transactions, in place of the present enactments regulating moneylenders, pawnbrokers and hire-purchase traders and their ...