Since the beginning of the year, millions of credit card customers have
been hit with higher interest rates -- in many cases from lenders that
have received billions of dollars in bailout cash from taxpayers.
Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Vermont
independent, responded last week with legislation that would impose a
15% cap on rates for all consumer loans, including plastic.
And you know what? It just might work.
That's because Sanders' bill would trump a 1978 Supreme Court ruling
that allowed banks to set credit card rates at whatever their home state
allowed. Banks, in turn, high-tailed it to places like South Dakota and
Delaware, which abandoned their usury laws to entice financial
institutions into setting up shop.
"Every state would have to honor
a federal rate cap of 15%," Sanders told me. "It would be a national
usury law."
He called after reading columns in which I detailed how Capital One
Financial Corp. is raising many cardholders' rates to nearly 18% -- even for
people who pay their bills on time and haven't missed any payments.
Meanwhile, Citigroup Inc. has told
cardholders their rates could soar to almost 30% if a single payment is
missed, and JPMorgan Chase & Co. said it would start charging a $10 monthly
fee to those who have carried large balances for more than a couple of
years.
Bank of America Corp., Wells Fargo & Co. and American Express Co. are among
other major lenders that have notified customers recently of rate increases.
"Everyone has been focusing on the subprime mortgage mess," Sanders said. "I
think it's time to focus on these absurd interest rates as well."
Credit card defaults are rising and
could hit a record 10% this year. One reason is that so many people got much
deeper into debt than they should have.
Another is card issuers keep turning the screws on existing customers --
those with balances they can't just walk away from -- in hopes of raising
cash to cover the industry's bad bets in the housing market.
Sanders noted that federally
chartered credit unions were limited for years to charging no more than 15%
on loans. The National Credit Union Administration raised that cap to 18% in
1987.
"If a rate cap has worked for credit
unions all these years, it could work for our friends in the financial
industry as well," Sanders said.
Chris Collver, legislative and regulatory analyst for the California Credit
Union League, agreed that a rate cap hasn't hurt business for the nearly 400
credit unions represented by his organization.
"It hasn't been an issue," he said. "Credit unions are still able to
thrive."
I pointed out to Sanders, who spent more than a decade on the House
Financial Services Committee before joining the Senate in 2006, that the
banking industry would throw every lobbyist at its disposal toward fighting
his bill.
"Obviously this is a pretty radical
act, and it will be fought," he replied. "But I think the American people
are disgusted with the financial industry. They want change."
You could argue that an interest rate of 15% or 18% is more than enough to
accommodate any amount of risk on the lender's part. If a loan appears
riskier than that, don't make it.
"What we have to ask as a nation is
whether it's ethical to charge people 30% interest rates," Sanders said.
"This is loan sharking. Let's call it what it is."
Phone fees
Are you one of millions of people who pay a fee every month for an unlisted
number? State Sen. Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) has introduced a bill -- SB
437 -- that would amend California's Public Utilities Code to prohibit phone
companies from charging to keep people out of the phone book.
Former state Sen. Sheila Kuehl had
introduced similar legislation last year, but it died on the vine.
Pavley's bill addresses a simple matter of fairness, halting the practice of
phone companies charging for a service they don't provide -- that is, not
publishing customers' numbers in a directory. Such charges can run as high
as $1.99 a month.
Pavley told me she could understand a one-time fee to remove someone's name
from a directory database. "But I don't see any reason why they have to keep
charging you this fee on a monthly basis."
Nor do I. And speaking of phone fees, I wrote last Sunday about a study from
the Utility Consumers' Action Network showing that the average cellphone
customer pays more than $3 per minute for wireless service.
I've since learned that UCAN was wrong when it said the finding was based on
a survey of more than 700 San Diego customers' bills.
The actual sample was 134 wireless bills from UCAN members. However,
TeleTruth, the auditing firm that conducted the survey, stood behind its
findings and methodology, and insisted that the results were still
representative of the broader market.
I heard from enough wireless customers who weren't part of the UCAN study to
believe that whatever the average cost per minute may be, it's still a whole
lot higher than what most people think is fair.
Kind of like that unlisted-number fee.
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David Lazarus' column runs Wednesdays and
Sundays. Send your tips or feedback to david.lazarus@latimes.com.