Senate Passes Credit Card Reform Bill
President Obama Could Sign The Credit Card Bill Of Rights This Week; Would Ban Excessive Rate Hikes And Fees
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Play CBS Video Video Credit Card Crackdown In response to complaints from consumers, the Senate voted to crack down on credit card companies. As Chip Reid reports, this bill was a long time coming.
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Video Credit Card Debt Epidemic Millions of Americans have soaring levels of credit card debt. Nancy Cordes reports that U.S. lawmakers are now pushing for legislation and reform relating to interest rates and regulations.
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Video Obama Pushes Credit Card Reform President Obama is pushing for credit card reform to help the millions of Americans who can't pay their bills. David Mark, Sr. Editor for Politico, discusses the latest from Washington.
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(iStockphoto)
The overwhelming bipartisan vote of 90-5 was lawmakers' way of telling Americans that they haven't been forgotten amid a recession that has left hundreds of thousands jobless or facing foreclosure.
With the House on track to endorse the measure by week's end, President Barack Obama could see a bill on his desk by the end of the week.
"We've got too many hard-working families in Massachusetts struggling to keep their heads above water, and the last thing they need is to get whacked with unfair credit card fees," said Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.
If Obama signs the bill as expected, the credit card industry in the next year would have to change the way it does business.
Lenders would have to post their credit card agreements on the Internet and let customers pay their bills online or by phone for free. They'd also have to give consumers a chance to spare themselves from over-the-limit fees and give them 45 days notice and an explanation before interest rates are increased.
In a key provision addressing a concept called "universal default," a customer would have to be more than 60 days behind on a payment before seeing his rate on an existing balance increase. Even then, the credit card company would be required to restore the previous, lower rate after six months if the consumer pays the minimum balance on time.
Left out of the bill, thanks to credit card industry lobbying: Two proposals to impose rate caps of 15 percent and 36 percent annual percentage rate on credit cards and other loans. (Read more from CBS News investigative producer Laura Strickler.)
The banking industry has warned lawmakers that the legislation would restrict credit at a time when Americans need it most. They defend their business practices as necessary to protect themselves when providing money to consumers with no collateral and little more than a promise to pay it back.
But members of Congress don't want to face voters in the 2010 election without proof that they are listening to constituents crushed by debt. They say credit card companies have gone too far.
"Any effort to restore confidence in our economy must start not on Wall Street, but in Main Street, and that's what the credit card situation is all about. It's about Main Street," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.
Obama too has taken up the issue, most recently last week at a town hall meeting in New Mexico. He said that while free-flowing credit is important, the government cannot tolerate profits made by misleading working families.
"This is America and we don't begrudge a company's success when that success is based on honest dealings with consumers," Obama said. "We need reform to restore some sense of balance."
The vote on the credit card bill came as a senior House Democrat tried to assure small, local banks that they weren't the target of financial reform efforts in Congress.
The House Financial Services Committee, led by Rep. Barney Frank, plans to consider in June legislation that would create a government entity that would monitor risk and dissolve large financial institutions that threaten the financial system. The cost of a "systemic risk regulator" and "resolution authority" is expected to be borne by the banking industry.
"While we are considering how best to fund the resolution authority, I believe there is a consensus on the House Financial Services Committee that small banks that have not contributed to the problem should not be assessed for the fix," said Frank, D-Mass., in a statement released Monday.
As lawmakers focus on how to prevent another financial meltdown and rein in credit cards, foreclosure rates and joblessness are on the rise.
According to a report released last week by RealtyTrac Inc., the number of U.S. households faced with losing their homes to foreclosure jumped 32 percent in April compared with the same month last year. Nevada, Florida and California showed the highest rates.
Meanwhile, the jobless rate rose to 8.9 percent in April with predictions that it will probably hit the double digits.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Don't get me wrong, but I am an Obama fan, anything devised by Chris Dodd has my utmost attention, there must be plenty of loopholes in this bill. Dodd is the chairman of the Banking COMMITTEE and he will on the surface make it look good, but underneath we haven't seen what is helping these banks. I have a feeling we will see all in about 6 months it will show up I feel. I hope I am wrong, but Dodd places these fears in my mind
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- No one is forced to run up unmanageable debt or pay exorbitant fees. If you can't pay cash, you probably can't afford it - old wives tale? Who cares.... its true.
Posted by despido at 5:25 PM : May 19, 2009
There is one exception to this statement that I'm well aware of - medical care.
I know of someone that had to face this - either cough up money NOW or go without emergency care -then when the HMO DENIED payment because LOSING EYESIGHT PERMANENTLY without care "WASN'T AN EMERGENCY" and the place he worked for informed him he's have to give up 25 PERCENT of his income or be "laid off" so they could keep being profitable... they first emptied savings and then resorted to credit.
The card went from 7 to 30 percent even though they paid on time and for the first time had to carry a balance. Trying to negotiate a lower rate worked in reverse for them and now the bank will use them as a "deadbeat" example since their SURPRISE "rate change" is pushing them into bankruptcy -they've tried every other avenue including taking every available job but the JACKED UP INTEREST on the medical bills have proven insurmountable.
ONE MORE REASON FOR UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE
The insurance and credit industries have become KILLER LEECHES. - Reply to this comment
- Poor old broken down Jimmy Carter. We are still paying for his mistakes. It appears that history will not be kind to him. Oh well.
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- IF there were a cap on the interest it would be Unconstitutional wouldn't it? Posted by skyk-2009 at 4:04 AM
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WHAT????? There used to be a cap on interest rates, its called USURY. It was voided by Jimmy Carter on March 31, 1980 and became law the following July. Get your facts straight - - Reply to this comment
- It's a joke just like Obama. Liberals, get out the chapstick because you'll be needing it.
Posted by enjoylife63 at 1:52 AM : May 20, 2009
How's that? - Reply to this comment
- This is largely a symbolic gesture by Obama in an attempt to bolster his approval. It's just table scrapes for the peasants. In the very near future he will forgive the $15B that he "loaned" to GM/UAW. I know Obama inherited some of these problems but, dam if i don't believe he is making it worse.
Posted by sky_five at 9:36 PM : May 19, 2009
Now even for a simple minded ditto head this makes no sense. I guess you think the folks who work for GM and are represented by the UAW aren't American's? They, by your OWN ADMISSION here have been helped... that's IMPROVEMENT for American's isn't it? Now how do you propose we change from Trickle Down to a Demand Economy if we do NOT give those at the bottom some help? It's getting better every day and that's the problem with you folks who seem to become more desperate by the minute. "Staying the Course" as the opposition wanted is NOT an option so get over it. - Reply to this comment
- You all best remember this. Obama received $410,116 dollars from the credit card companies during the campaign for president. If you look closely at this bill there is no cap on interest. All the politicians are in the business of staying in office, and Obama is no different, except it's payback time for him. The citizens got screwed again.
Posted by rmoore17 at 3:04 AM : May 20, 2009
LOL No, I'm sorry but you are wrong on this and there is no doubt of it. IF there were a cap on the interest it would be Unconstitutional wouldn't it? What this bill does is gives those of us who have cards the assurance that the money we used thinking we'd get one rate only to find that rate increased are going to have some protection and the ability to get out from under future rate increases. It provides also, that Credit Card Companies can not hook you with a "trial rate" and then a month later jack that rate up. I know you folks who have wished for failure of this President are desperate... I just for the life of me can't figure out why! He's done a great job, tackled problems that have been lying there for way to long and tells us what and why he's doing things. Now compared to what we had, both he and the Congress are a massive improvement. - Reply to this comment
- So typical of the new Obama administration....
There appears an article touting some supposedly significant legislative achievement of Obama, and immediately afterward appears another article describing how loopholes in the legislation will be exploited. ....And he smiles. - Reply to this comment
- You moron. Just come out and say it...you care nothing about the legislation; you only care that the black guy is doing it. What a freaking idiot. Devalue the dollar? He idiot...that is not a direct process. Raise interest rates? They are at.05% retard...do you think they will be there forever? Enacting legislation to monitor the credit card companies from jacking up your rates with no warning or reason is a good thing, regardless of what your neocon hate-everybody who isn't trying to abuse everyone else around them for a dollar mentality that you apparently have. What a farkin jerk
Posted by texasbeta at 7:02 PM
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Obviously you have no comprehension what-so-ever of the economy, finance or credit markets. Which is no doubt why you've resorted to becoming a follower, since you're already a loser by default. This legislation, if you researched at all, is quite beneficial to the very card issuers it is purported to regulate. They own Obama, they got everything they asked for.
BTW, the value of the dollar (and every currency) is a direct process of the foreign exchange markets. Thirty year bonds are paying over 4% and climbing rapidly, your paltry savings account is NOT where the FED borrows its money. Obama is taking the U.S. down the road of the late 70's and early 80's. Not many will enjoy the ride. - Reply to this comment
- mrcrosbyll, ya who every you are, you had it pretty much perfect.....
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- "Left out of the bill, thanks to credit card industry lobbying: Two proposals to impose rate caps of 15 percent and 36 percent annual percentage rate on credit cards and other loans"
After reading seven paragraphs of "those evil credit card companies" and "How great this is for the hard-working family" This little "doozie" is hidden way down in the eighth paragraph, tells it all. Since there are NO caps on interest rates, even if you pay your credit card bill every
month, you are going to get socked with 36% interest!!! Do you think the credit card companies are going to do without??? Thank you all Senators for this attack on the American family who are facing Obama's new taxation!!! - Reply to this comment
- "The FED will have two choices - raise interest rates dramatically or devalue the dollar"
I question how the average guy will make any money on his savings if interest rates stay where they are...as far as the value of a dollar, the Bush administration quit reporting on how much new money was printed - any value that it still has is largely a perceived notion fed by those that stand to continue to fill their bank accounts if the story is belived by the unwashed masses. - Reply to this comment
- I've got to talk about my own situation. We are probably in the upper 1% of net worth in this country. But we saved and saved, and paid off our home in 1981, and haven't had a mortgage since. We have about $300k invested in a 30 year old home in a upscale neighborhood, but not a McMAnsion.
I drive a honda civic - why - because not sending our money to the Saudis and Hugh Chavez's of the world is terribly important if our country is to get out of debt. My wife drives a honda Accord 4 cylinder. Also a great mileage car.
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And we don't keep up with the Joneses. We have a big bulky 27 inch TV and won't replace it with a flat panel until it dies and isn't worth fixing.
And every year we give 5 figures to various social justice causes, including some to college scholarships. I've helped a couple kids I know get off dead center / fool around lives. One wwill enter Med school next fall. The other graduated National Honor society in Accounting from Clemson.
That is what life is supposed to be about. Not stealing from people for filthy wealth. And my two married kids, in their 30's, also own their homes, one free and clear, the other with only 50,000 mtg.
All of this from lessons my parents taught me about the great Hoover REpublican depression, and how that Jerk of a President did nothing, and it got worse and worse.
And that depression was world wide, and the collapse of Germany's economy -made the people susceptible to a right wing demagogue, and 50 million died to break that monstrosity, which was based not on "socialism" despite the name, but on hate and collusion between the govt and big business, looking for war profits.
BTW the name Bush is from the German Busche. And his grandfather Sen Prescott Bush's bank lent the Nazis tens of millions in the `1930s, helping them to rearm. You know the result. - Reply to this comment
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- I drive a honda civic - why - because not sending our money to the Saudis and Hugh Chavez's of the world is terribly important if our country is to get out of debt. My wife drives a honda Accord 4 cylinder. Also a great mileage car.
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so instead of sending your money to those you mention you forgot to mention the part about not buying an american made car and sending your money to japan....didn't you?
oh.....didn't even think about that one!
:((
- I drive a honda civic - why - because not sending our money to the Saudis and Hugh Chavez's of the world is terribly important if our country is to get out of debt. My wife drives a honda Accord 4 cylinder. Also a great mileage car.
- Same old BS from the people rattling about socialism
The same people who gave us a winner take all, rape the middle class philosophy that is totally the opposite about Jesus said to the rich man - "give your wealth to the poor, for it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle then for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven."
And it was the socalled moral values people who violated this scripture, and supported the near collapse of our economy, as long as they got their millions etc.
The same people who ran the banking system into the ground, and then stole billions in "performance bonuses"
Hypocrits hardly fits. Criminal is the best definition.
The way you fix this is to have national standards for credit card operations. And a special quick reaction court empowered to look at all the new tricks that will be tried, and stop them.
And yes, we will have to get off our debt binge.
And yes I did work pt time retail for 7 years, and saw how people were to be blunt screwed left and right by the same banks like eg citibank, who took billions. Let alone the games they played, the best ever credit card interest rate I ever saw on the Circuit city / Citibank card was 20%. While on my credit card it is about 7.5%, and I get a refund of 1.2% at year end.
And pay it off every month, and haven't paid a cent in interest in more the 20 years.
Back in the old days, Brinks was robbed in Boston about 1`950. A million was taken. None of the employees were hurt. Most of the perpetrators were caught and got life in prison.
What should we do with people who steal billions?
Crushing their scams is first order of business
National standards for credit card terms is another. If the banks don't like it they have the right to restrict card issuance, or cancel cards.
But not the right to sell people, and then steal their life savings.
And note that the Senate passed the bill 95 to 5. Even the republicans realize what George Bush licensed with his corruption.
And from another point of view, the central issue through almost all of western history has been the struggle between corrupt kings allied with the 'lords', who lived with great wealth. While the ordinary people were Serfs, who had a life of unending toil. Serf, btw comes from the word slave. - Reply to this comment
- The only problem with this bill is that the reforms are delayed.
CITI and CHASE have legislated for usury for decades. The delay is to let the ecomomy recover, I guess. - Reply to this comment
- The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny, and it is useless for the innocent to try by reasoning to get justice, when the oppressor intends to be unjust. (AESOP)
This credit card isuue is a smoke screen to divert attention from the banks and insurance companies use of 'credit' to knowingly make bad loans, and then sell the paper as investments. The people that 'bought' homes in this scam were in over their heads twice from the start. Overvalued homes in a very narrow market, and dishonest realtors and mortgage brokers. Those buyers are being called dummies. The people that bought the paper, worldwide you see, are I suppose just s.o.l. The process that led to the 'crash' took years and was open for all to see and yet congress did nothing, except humor George W Bush, and spend us, the American taxpayer, dry. So now, we need credit card reform. Not even. We need banking reform and a new government. - Reply to this comment
- I love President Obama, at least he is doing something to help the working man....................
Posted by shoedog20 at 6:14 PM
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In about 18 months or so, you'll find out exactly what Obama has done. You think Obama just 'saved' maxed out idiot consumers?? Who's gonna save a maxed out gov't?? The FED will have two choices - raise interest rates dramatically or devalue the dollar - Here's a hint - they're both very bad things.
Posted by despido
You moron. Just come out and say it...you care nothing about the legislation; you only care that the black guy is doing it. What a freaking idiot. Devalue the dollar? He idiot...that is not a direct process. Raise interest rates? They are at.05% retard...do you think they will be there forever? Enacting legislation to monitor the credit card companies from jacking up your rates with no warning or reason is a good thing, regardless of what your neocon hate-everybody who isn't trying to abuse everyone else around them for a dollar mentality that you apparently have. What a farkin jerk - Reply to this comment
- The cycle of debt begins...and never ends.
Posted by texasbeta at 6:14 PM
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So how is this my responsibility?
Posted by despido
What role do you play in it either way? Don't be so egocentric. IF this bill has nothing to do with you...then MOVE ON! The credit card companies rape the country and go unregulated...now they are starting to enact regulation. Targeting kids the second they go on campus is ridiculous. Lots of things they do is ridiculous. Your taxes aren't going up...so shut your mouth and move on if it doesn't affect you. What would you even ask that? If this doesn't affect you, then why the hell are you reading the posts and commenting? - Reply to this comment
- I love President Obama, at least he is doing something to help the working man....................
Posted by shoedog20 at 6:14 PM
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In about 18 months or so, you'll find out exactly what Obama has done. You think Obama just 'saved' maxed out idiot consumers?? Who's gonna save a maxed out gov't?? The FED will have two choices - raise interest rates dramatically or devalue the dollar - Here's a hint - they're both very bad things. - Reply to this comment
- The cycle of debt begins...and never ends.
Posted by texasbeta at 6:14 PM
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So how is this my responsibility? - Reply to this comment





