The Great Credit Card Scam
by Bernie Sanders
Published on 12/1/2004 in the North Jersey Record
TODAY'S LOAN SHARKS are no longer lurking on street
corners or hiding in alleys, breaking knee caps to collect their payments.
They now wine
and dine with the president and other powerful political leaders, wear
Armani suits, make hundreds of millions in total compensation and head
banks like Citigroup, MBNA and Capital One. The old-fashioned loan shark
was a common criminal who broke the law. The modern loan shark, through
campaign contributions and political connections, writes the law.
At a
time when interest rates have been historically low, credit card issuers
made a record breaking $30 billion in profits last year by charging
usurious interest rates and sky-high fees. Millions of financially strapped
credit card holders are now being forced to pay 15 percent to 30 percent
interest rates and hundreds of dollars a year on late fees and other
add-ons. Like the loan sharks of old, credit card companies lie, deceive
and destroy lives in the process.
Meanwhile, as credit card issuers rip
off middle-class Americans through deceptive and unfair tactics, the
CEOs are laughing all the way to their
banks. Over the last five years, the CEO of Citigroup (Sanford Weill)
made more than $500 million in total compensation and the CEO of Capital
One (Richard Fairbank) made more than $169 million in total compensation.
In 2002 alone, the top four executives at credit card giant MBNA made
more than $300 million in total compensation.
One of the most egregious
ways that these modern-day corporate loan sharks make their bloated profits
is through the credit card interest rate "bait
and switch." Just check your mailbox today and you'll probably find
one of the 5 billion credit card solicitations (the actual figure) that
the companies bombard consumers with every year. What you'll see on these
advertisements in bold print are attractive offers promising low interest
rates of 4 percent, 6 percent or sometimes even zero percent. That's
the bait. But, what you probably won't notice is that in the very fine
print at the bottom of a multi-page contract written in undecipherable
legalese is language that essentially allows the company to raise their
rates at any time for any reason. That's the switch.
The reality is that
many thousands of Americans are now paying interest rates double or
triple than what they signed up for. While short-term
interest rates set by the Federal Reserve Board are now 2 percent,
many credit card holders are paying interest as high as 25 percent to
30 percent.
Most
egregiously, interest rates are soaring for consumers even when they
fulfill their end of the contract and make all their monthly payments
on time. How does this happen? Maybe you were one day late paying a
student loan three years before you obtained your credit card. Maybe
you bought
a new home. Maybe you committed the crime of taking out a loan to pay
for a medical emergency. Or maybe you did nothing at all. It doesn't
matter.
Even if you have always paid all of your bills on time, the credit
card issuer can still raise your interest rates at any time for any reason.
Unlike fixed mortgage rates, there is no such thing as a fixed credit
card interest rate that you can depend upon. Further, there have been
outrageous increases in late fees that have cost consumers billions of
dollars.
Last year, Congress had the opportunity to support a bill that
would end this "bait and switch" scam once and for all. Unfortunately,
the banks and credit card companies, with their millions in campaign
contributions, constitute one of the most powerful lobbies on Capitol
Hill and were able to prevent any serious legislation on this issue from
being passed. But consumers and their representatives in Washington must
not give up.
The middle-class of this country is struggling hard to keep
their heads above water economically. Unemployment is high, good paying
jobs and
pensions are disappearing, and health care and college education are
becoming much more expensive. The simple truth is that in order to
survive many families are forced to borrow. The result is that U.S. consumers
are now $2 trillion in debt and a record- breaking 1.6 million families
went bankrupt last year, an increase of more than 125 percent since 1989.
Loan-sharking
is an odious practice whether it is performed by street corner thugs
or the CEOs of large banks. Charging economically vulnerable
Americans outrageous interest rates and fees is simply not acceptable
and, amid all of the recent political discussion over "values," this
certainly does not constitute "moral" behavior. The time is
long overdue for Congress and the White House to stand up for American
consumers, take on the modern-day loan sharks and end the credit card "bait
and switch" scam.
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