Credit Card Debate over Consumers' IQ

December 5, 2007 RSS Feed Print
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Over the past week, I've attended two heated discussions on the future of the credit card industry. The first, last Friday, was hosted by the Consumer Federation of America, and the second, Tuesday, was a Senate hearing on credit card interest rates.

The arguments are basically over whether credit card companies treat their customers fairly. Consumer rights groups and certain members of Congress, such as Sens. Carl Levin and Claire McCaskill, Democrats from Michigan and Missouri respectively, think credit card companies are unfair in the aggressive way they solicit customers and then raise interest rates when customers start to struggle with their debt.

As McCaskill put it, "It seems part of the problem is that the behavior you encourage is the behavior you use to raise interest rates." (McCaskill has personal knowledge of the problems with this system: Even after the senator closed one of her mother's credit card accounts, her mother received blank checks from the company in the mail.)

On the other side of the debate, credit card providers argue that without the ability to raise rates on those with high risk factors, they may have to raise rates on all customers to offset the losses from that group, or stop offering credit to some people altogether.

The thing that strikes me about this debate is how often we consumers are talked about as if our minds are barely functioning. One woman, who identified herself as an employee of the Washington, D.C., government, stood up at the Consumer Federation of America meeting and suggested that card companies put the following warning, written in large lettering, on all of their statements: "If you use credit cards, you could end up in major debt." As one woman whispered to her friend behind me, "That's like writing on candy, 'Eating sugar may rot your teeth.'"

We don't need such obvious statements. We just need some basic facts. For example, how much am I paying each month in interest? What will cause my interest rate to go up, and how will I be notified if it does? What fees am I paying, and why? Without that information, a customer can suddenly find herself paying 24 percent interest, as Janet Hard testified she did with her Discover card. Her interest rate ballooned even after she made her Discover payments on time, partly because her credit score had declined and Discover deemed her a credit risk. Had she known about the interest rate hike, she could have closed her account in advance of it. (Credit card companies do often disclose this information somewhere, but it tends to be in an unintelligible form or in small print that's easily missed.)

Customers aren't stupid. We just need to be informed of how companies plan to treat us before deciding where to spend our money.

Please leave your own comments on the credit card debate below.

Tags:
Claire McCaskill,
Carl Levin,
credit cards

Reader Comments Read all comments (29)

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I strongly disagree with your closing statement. PEOPLE ARE STUPID, and lazy and greedy and selfish. Why do people keep spending money they don't have on things they don't need? Why don't people save more money for their retirement? Why do people max out their credit cards and keep getting more? Why do people spend without a budget and say they have no idea on how to create or keep a budget?

Most people's debt come from poor lifestyle choices like having more children than one can afford or going on vacation instead of contributing that money to an emergency fund. Unanticipated catastrophes like medical expenses are the exception, not the norm

JimmyDaGeek of MD 10:40AM June 30, 2008

Yes, it is hard to not use credit cards when you lose your job and go to unemployment. Credit Cards offer you minimum payment what is every month you need to pay +add interest on that.You paying this long time making them richer and richer and geting your self poor and poor. If you do not pay on time they increase your interest rate and late payment fee making you go more to poor...

Power to the people and make equal every human on the earth, to share with each what they have, then we will not need credit cards or be poor....

We need to help each other equal.NOT I AM REACH AND YOU WILL STAY POOR

PEOPLE NEED TO HELP EACH OTHER ,TO WE be ABLE TO LIVE. THE END OF WORLD IS COMING ,GLOBAL WORMING, We need to stop that togheter...for future

of our childrens... We need think for future......

Peace to the Earth and love each other.....

sean of FL 11:08AM June 15, 2008

This isn't anything new in the world. The credit card companies are increasingly becoming loan sharks, preying on those who -- whether through mismanagement or desperation -- make any mistake. I broke my leg and was late on my Household Bank payment by a couple days -- they charged me a fee greater than the amount I was supposed to pay. This can be used as an excuse by other companies to send rates through the roof. They feed on the misfortunes of others -- it's one thing to offer higher interest rates to people who are bad risks, it's another to raise rates once someone is struggling.

We need to simplify our lives when we can -- though hospital bills are the budget- and credit-death for many people, I don't know what to recommend to people who have something worse than a broken leg.

Except we all should get rid of the politicians who are in the pockets of these loan sharks: see if your local politician supports fair restrictions -- for example preventing "universal default" where we can pay a credit card company on time but they raise our rates for being late somewhere else. Especially the politicians that support bailing out the banks but letting individuals get sharked, get rid of them!

Stephen Cataldo of CA 1:29AM June 01, 2008

Alpha Consumer

Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, writes about making smarter financial decisions. She’s the author of Generation Earn: The Young Professional's Guide to Spending, Investing, and Giving Back.

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