Senator Seeks National Interest-Rate Cap on All Consumer Loans

Debt Relief

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., has a plan to rescue consumers from interest-rate hikes on everything from mortgages to credit cards: He’s proposed a piece of legislation that would force all companies offering consumer loans to cap interest rates at 15 percent, according to The Bennington Banner (“Sanders Seeks Interest Rate Cap,” March 13, 2009).

Currently, credit card companies, based on a 1978 Supreme Court decision, are only required to abide by the interest-rate restrictions enforced in their home state. Many financial services companies have taken advantage of this state-by-state enforcement and established headquarters in South Dakota and Delaware, states that don’t have restrictions on how much interest banks can charge.

Sanders’ bill would overrule that court decision, imposing the 15-percent interest rate cap on credit cards and consumer loans issued in all states, and would limit the fees banks can charge. His plan is modeled after a similar interest rate cap implemented under the Federal Credit Union Act nearly 30 years ago, which was set at 15 percent and later increased to 18 percent in 1987 by the National Credit Union Administration.

“If a rate cap has worked for credit unions all these years, it could work for our friends in the financial industry as well,” Sanders said.

A New Era for Credit Card Rates

Sanders believes his legislation will be met with staunch resistance from banking industry lobbyists, but he says it’s time for financial service companies to end their “culture of greed.”

Credit card companies are taking billions of dollars in taxpayer bailout money, and, in some cases, receiving zero-interest loans from the Federal Reserve, all while ratcheting up fees and interest rates. Citigroup credit card holders, for example, have been told their rates could go as high as 30 percent if they miss a single payment, and JPMorgan Chase customers who have large balances may have to start paying $10 monthly fees.

Sanders says the free-wheeling rate hikes and fees currently implemented by banks is “loan sharking,” and these banking tactics are making it even more difficult for struggling consumers to pay down their debts.

“This is very significant because right now there are millions and millions of people who are paying outrageously high interest rates on their credit cards. We think enough is enough,” Sanders said. “At a time when things are so bad, they need relief in terms of these interest rates.”

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