Credit Card Reform
Tuesday, August 12th, 2008The Federal Reserve received around 56,000 responses from angry credit card customers with regards to the new rules it proposed against abusive credit card practices. The rage over arbitrary hike in interest rates based on factors apart from the consumer’s credit history is apparently pretty wide spread.
A long list of factors is contributing towards making unethical or usurious practices in banking industry the norm. The consumer rights bill sponsored by House Financial Services Committee Representative Carol Mahoney moves toward preventing credit card companies from arbitrarily raising interest rates on a balance incurred under an old rate or for unrelated reasons.
One of the major factors motivating abusive lending is the trend of larger and larger corporations. The big banks such as Bank of America, Citi Group and Chase that issue most of the credit cards can take credit risks and absorb the damage in the form of spiked interest rates and sale of bad debts.
Another factor is the focus of the company management solely on meeting the expectations, unrealistic as they may be, of the stock holders who pay them. The interests of the customers are being compromised for increased ROI’s and salaries of the upper echelons.
Not to entirely absolve the consumers and the government, the practice of encouraging expenditure in the absence of liquidity with unsecured credit cards has ruined all hopes of economic stimulus through conspicuous consumption. These lead to abusive lending practices which is another source lost for ready cash like the time when the subprime mortgage crisis hit us.
So, credit card reform is most definitely overdue but first and foremost we need a pool of people who make enough money to cover their basic needs and still have some left to spend on consumer goods. These will require some systemic changes that cannot be accomplished without bloodshed.
The bill is a good start to all of this, but the banks are ferociously fighting the bill, despite its fairly modest restraints. This resistance by the industry makes me wonder- “Has the banking industry completely lost whatever moral compass it might once have possessed?”