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Econwatch
April 23, 2009 4:57 PM

Senators Want Emergency Credit Card Rate Freeze

Topics
Credit Cards
(CBS/AP)

This post was written by Stephanie Condon.

While President Obama met today with executives from the leading credit card companies, two senators called on the Federal Reserve to immediately implement an emergency freeze on interest rates tied to existing balances on credit cards.

The Federal Reserve plans to implement a new set of rules for credit card lending beginning July 2010, but that is too long to wait, Senators Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) and Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a letter sent to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and other regulators. Companies are increasing interest rates now before the new rules go into effect, they said.

"Consumers describe situations to our offices in which the interest rates on their accounts have doubled or tripled overnight, without any misconduct on their part," the letter says. "This kind of practice clearly violates the spirit and intention of the rules, even if the delayed implementation date has the effect of making such behavior legal."

Congress is working on legislation that would codify the Fed's new rules, but the bill is still in development.

After meeting with 14 executives from companies like Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Visa, President Obama said that his administration would work with Congress to evaluate proposals for reform.

"We're at a time where issues of credit and how businesses and families are able to finance everything from a car loan to a student loan to just paying their bills every day is on a lot of people's minds," the president said. "We want to preserve the credit card market, but we also want to do so in a way that eliminates some of the abuses and some of the problems that a lot of people are familiar with."

The card executives at today's White House meeting agreed to work with the administration to address the president's concerns, according to the American Bankers Association, and are currently working to implement the Federal Reserves' new rules. The ABA, however, took issue with the new regulations.

"The Federal Reserve itself has indicated these rules are likely to shrink credit availability and result in increased rates for some consumers," ABA President Edward Yingling said in a statement. "The goal of any additional efforts should be to achieve the right balance between enhancing consumer protections and ensuring that credit remains available to consumers and small businesses at a reasonable cost."

Some Republicans are also concerned about the impact of the new regulations. Rep. Scott Garrett (R-N.J.), a member of the House Financial Services Committee, said the legislation to codify the new rules is well-intended but will have negative consequences.

"There's no one on either side of the aisle who does not want to have more transparency so that people know what they're getting into and what they're dealing with," Garrett told CBS News. "But with the credit market already tightening, now is not the time to make it even more difficult for the moderate-income family, with even more reasons to rely on his credit card, to find out he can't get one."

He said implementing any of the Fed's new rules immediately, as Dodd and Schumer are requesting, would only exacerbate the impact.

"One benefit (of the current regulatory change) is it goes into effect later on, and we can hope the recession we're in now will be loosening up for other reasons," he said. "Once they go into effect, I think they will have a dampening effect on the availability of credit."


Add a Comment See all 25 Comments
by keithle1 April 28, 2009 10:35 PM EDT
Hooked on plastic. Can't even pay for a cup of coffee & a sandwich without pulling out the plastic. God forbid anyone pays cash. Cash? What's that? Eeeeewwwww.
It's dirty! If you just have to have a credit card then get a low credit limit. Why do you need a $10,000 credit limit?

How much of the credit card business is the result of women shopping?
Reply to this comment
by kmiller1301 December 3, 2009 8:17 PM EST
What kind of garbage is "result of women shopping"? How ignorant and naive are you??!!!
by cheetah-man7 April 28, 2009 10:41 AM EDT
I say jack the interest rate to 50% I pay my cards every month so I pay 0%
Posted by dwilson59



Big deal your are a rich scumbag who wants to brag about how good your doing financially.........ANYONE who sides with the greedy thieves is against America recovering......wishing ill economics upon the people of this country is about as unpatriotic as it gets....I bet you are one of those flag waving idiots that thinks the answer to everything is military action, and supports the two lie wars we are in now. Maybe another Madoff will end up with your riches and you can start worrying about how to eat and pay bills too, like millions of GOOD DECENT Americans are doing now because of ripoff tactics that corporate America is doing to the people.
Posted by tincup356
__________________________

I agree with you 100%, tincup. I bet Sean Hannity brainwashed dwilson with his ill-branding of what being a patriotic American is all about. These people totally disgust me as well as the banks they support.
Reply to this comment
by oftencensord April 25, 2009 7:35 AM EDT
The reason credit rates are so high, is they are unsecured loans, and you are paying for everyone else who defaults. That is why credit card rates have ALWAYS been high.

What is amazing to me, is people get a credit card with a promotional "sucker rate" and now think it is their right to keep that rate, and want the US Government to FORCE banks to give to them! Maybe we can have the US Government force them to give us more airline miles too!

Credit cards are merely a convenience, not a right people!

Don't make it my problem if you are ignorant about credit cards and how to use them.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti April 24, 2009 1:16 PM EDT
Maybe it is time for We the People to take over the credit companies as well as the banks.
Reply to this comment
by bubba027 April 24, 2009 11:41 AM EDT
If you would like to help pressure Congress for a credit card bill of rights please join our voting bloc at:
http://votingbloc.org/Credit_Card_Rights.php
Posted by pontesisto at 3:14 AM : Apr 24, 2009

Quit using credit cards altogether. That's the most effective vote you have.
Reply to this comment
by bubba027 April 24, 2009 11:38 AM EDT
They are not going to get any new laws passed in time to help anyone. By the time such laws take effect, everyone with a credit card balance who is stupid enough to keep paying on it will already be paying a 30% APR -- which will, of course, be grandfathered in.
Posted by Void_Master at 9:13 PM : Apr 23, 2009

Why wouldn't you pay off what you borrowed? Wouldn't it be stealling if you didn't? Companies do give you notice before they raise your rates. When that happens to me, I either switch cards or pay it off and quit using it.
Reply to this comment
by esquin April 24, 2009 11:36 AM EDT
Congress needs to stand up & do the morally correct thing - impose usury laws on banks, the credit card rates are no better than payday loans.
Reply to this comment
by bubba027 April 24, 2009 11:34 AM EDT
I am going to an all cash economy - if I can't pay cash, I won't buy anything. They can "service" my account all they want, but I'll be damned if they get any more of my hard earned dollars.
Posted by superdem1 at 7:48 AM : Apr 24, 2009

You likely should have satrated paying cash before your rate got to 25%--ouch. How is squashing what the banks can charge in interest going to improve the credit crisis? they will just stop lending to those who they thought they needed to charge 25%. I have credit cards but don't use them much. My rates are at record lows and I have other companies begging me to take their cards, but i don't need them. oh, I'm not rich muckity muck either. Live within your means and you won't need to worry about credit card interest.
Reply to this comment
by kmiller1301 December 3, 2009 8:36 PM EST
As a question - don't you think that the ones that they are charging 25% are the ones that are using the cards the most and making the banks the most money? You said so yourself; your rates are low but it sounds as though you are not using them at all. Why would they stop lending to those with high interest rates that are paying their balances off or in full each month? Just as in the article, consumers are expressing frustration how their rates are skyrocketing for no misconduct on their part- which if you ever read the fine print, the rates can change for any reason even without notification. I noticed that happen to my account too right after I made a big purchase earlier this year. I have already paid it off, but the damage was done, and I was livid over it. How are the Americans, who have a small leverage to rebuild credit, an issue that is so important to our individual economic status', supposed to rebuild and raise their scores when banks were raising and now freezing rates? The extra hard earned money that people have will be going towards those higher interest rates instead of going back into building the economy, which is the overall goal in the first place.
by superdem1 April 24, 2009 10:48 AM EDT
A freeze won't help - my credit card interest rate is 25% !!! THAT should be against the law ! The REPUBLICANS let them do that ! Freezing these high rates does NOTHING to stop the damage. And people think they aren't getting socked if they pay on time - WRONG ! The banks start sucking your blood with "service charges" the moment you make a purchase ! I am going to an all cash economy - if I can't pay cash, I won't buy anything. They can "service" my account all they want, but I'll be damned if they get any more of my hard earned dollars.
Reply to this comment
by whitemale08 April 24, 2009 10:28 AM EDT
Another example of how the system is bankrupt.

CALL CONGRESS AND DEMAND AN END TO ALL BAILOUTS!

TELL GOLDMAN SUCKS, JP MORGAN TO GO INTO RECEIVERSHIP!

WE DO NOT BAILOUT WORTHLESS DERIVATIVES AND CREDIT-DEFAULT SWAPS!
Reply to this comment
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