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12/17/07

EU-Digest: Credit Card Industry And Member Banks Sticking It To The Consumer

Plastic time bombs in your wallet
A special EU-Digest report on the credit card industry and their member banks

EU-Digest Special Report: Credit Card Industry and Member Banks Sticking It To The Consumer

There are plastic time bombs sitting in your wallet - they are called credit cards. The "bargain" you bought at your favorite store with your credit card will increase in price by at least 28 percent, within a year, if you keep that purchase on your credit card by not paying off your credit card monthly.

The situation in the credit card industry is getting out of hand on both sides of the Atlantic. In Europe earlier this year the European Commission's antitrust regulator said in a draft summary it would possibly investigate banks and payment card providers for colluding on prices and using practices aimed at keeping competitors out of their markets. Also, according to the report, credit card fees and interest rates vary between countries, which indicate that there is limited cross-border competition.

In the US, this past Tuesday, the Merchants Payments Coalition, which groups about 30 associations, representing almost 2.7 million stores in America, applauded a congressional hearing on unfair credit card practices in the United States. The hearing, held by the US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, is one of several meetings already held this year to investigate the allegedly unfair practices imposed on consumers and merchants by credit card companies and their member bank companies. "This hearing is another example of how serious the issue of credit card abusive practices is for everyone", said a Senator on the Subcommittee. "The credit card industry is profiting from outrageous fees". During the Tuesday Subcommittee meeting the discussion also focused on the so-called "interchange" fee, which represents a percentage of each transaction that American Express, Discover Visa, MasterCard and their member banks collect from retailers every single time a credit or debit card is used to pay for a purchase. The fee varies with the type of merchant, transaction, and card, but averages out to roughly 2% per transaction. This fee is the reason why some merchants require a minimum purchase of X amount before they will permit a customer to make their purchase using a credit or debit card. Unfortunately, the US Congress so far has only held discussions, but has done nothing to actually reduce or limit the exorbitant fees, sky-high penalties, and above normal interest rates being charged to cardholders. The need for action is becoming more and more pressing. Specially now the US Federal Reserve has cut benchmark interest rates. The credit card companies and their member bank companies have not followed suit after the interest rates were dropped and are still charging abnormally high interest rates and ridiculously bloated service fees.

In the US the five banks that issue most Visa and MasterCards include JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citibank, Capital One, and HSBC. Surveys show all these banks have a poor reputation for making their Customers pay outrages fees for services and far higher than normal interest rates. The Household Bank MasterCard has a cash advance rate of 25.15 percent. Blue from American Express and Sun Trust’s Visa charge 23.34 percent. On top of that, there usually is a transaction fee of 3 percent or more. Someone using their Chase credit card to get a $1,500 cash advance will pay about $465 in interest and fees for this so-called "service" within the first year.

During the past months the Central Banks from all over the world have pumped billions of hard currency into the world-wide banking system to fight off liquidity problems, mainly the result of their own making and poor judgment. So far, the benefits of the Central Banks bailout have not trickled down to the US consumer, where household debt continues to rise, after it reached $14.2 trillion in the third quarter, or a record 138% of US household disposable income, up from 113% in 2002.

Therefore it seems that one of the areas which urgently needs to be looked at by governments world-wide is the unregulated credit card industry.

Figures today show that the average American owes about euro 6,872 ($9.900.00) in credit card debt, which amounts to a staggering total of euro 639bn ($920bn)for the whole US. In Europe, according to the BBC and the Credit Action Group the average European has about euro 2,185.00 ($ 3,147) of unsecured/credit card debt. One third of the total European credit card debt involves British credit card owners. Banks in Britain generally apply American credit card policies and standards.

Given these facts and the steady rise in the use of credit cards and consumer debt in the EU, the European Parliament would do EU consumers and the economy a service to also open an investigation into the practices of the credit card industry, but hopefully with better results than the US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations has achieved so far for American citizens.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Paper violence can be just as lethal as physical theft of property. In many ways paper violence is worse because the lack of a physical crime makes it appear less tragic or hurtful when it can actually be worse.

I have created two websites that identify, explain, and then offer solutions relating to two major ways that I believe credit card companies are harming the blue collar worker in america and abroad.

http://www.credit-card-cap.com and http://www.credit-protector.com

Anonymous said...

erik.

Log onto "capitalone"(note not CapitalOne.com) scroll down to complaints, and veiw their abuse.

Or go to Reports.com