Zera Yacob's emphasis on reason as the path to truth becomes the ethical bedrock for assessing creditworthiness and building trust.
Zera Yacob argued that reason, not authority or tradition, must guide human judgment. In credit relationships, this principle transforms creditworthiness from mere financial metrics into a reasoned assessment of character, capacity, and commitment. A lender practicing this Yacobite approach asks: Does this borrower demonstrate rational self-interest aligned with repayment? Do their decisions reflect reasoned planning? This concept reframes credit not as a transaction between strangers but as a covenant between rational agents who can explain and justify their financial choices. For borrowers, it means creditworthiness flows from demonstrating reasoned financial behavior—transparent budgeting, logical planning, and coherent explanations for financial decisions. Trust emerges when both parties appeal to shared reason rather than power or desperation.
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