Credit Scoring And Its Applications By L C Thomas 📍

That night, she read by a single desk lamp. Thomas’s words were not just equations—they were prophecies. Logistic regression, survival analysis, reject inference… each chapter was a ghost from the 1990s, whispering how data could outsmart human prejudice. But one margin note, dated 1998, stopped her cold: “The score is a mirror. It reflects the lender, not the borrower.”

Curious, Miriam dug into the bank’s digital tomb. She fed ten years of rejected applications into a model Thomas himself might have built. The result was quiet heresy: sixty percent of those rejected—mostly immigrants, women, and the elderly—would have repaid. The bank’s “fair” scorecard had systematically coded historical bias as risk. Credit Scoring And Its Applications By L C Thomas

In the fluorescent-lit archives of a fading London bank, an aging risk analyst named Miriam stumbled upon a forgotten first edition: Credit Scoring and Its Applications by L. C. Thomas. The book’s spine was cracked, its margins filled with a previous owner’s frantic pencil scratches. Miriam, who had spent thirty years manually approving small business loans, felt a strange pull. That night, she read by a single desk lamp