Good
Intentions Do Not Always Make for Good Results
by Sarah
Longwell
TownHall.com
Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT) is likely to unveil highly-anticipated financial
reform legislation in the coming week. This news comes a few days after
Republican Senator Bob Corker announced his plan to partner with Dodd on
financial reform. Until that point, the two political parties had been unable to
see eye-to-eye on this topic. A bi-partisan agreement would likely include
stronger government oversight of Wall Street, but not a new financial protection
agency for consumers (a sticking point for Senator Corker).
But in their efforts to hammer out a compromise and gird our country against
future financial crises, our representatives should be mindful of the history of
unintended consequences that resulted from poorly thought-out government
financial intervention.
One consequence reared its head late last year, following the passage of the
Credit CARD Act of 2009. Among other provisions, this legislation placed limits
on the fees that some card providers could charge to their customers, capping
them at 25 percent of the card’s total credit line. Fees like this were targeted
because they were considerably higher than normal card fees, and sometimes
“hidden” in the small print of a card’s agreement.
Congress’ actions may sound reasonable, until you consider that many
consumers with poor credit histories relied on these high-fee cards as their
only source of credit.
For the majority of Americans who don’t have a spotty credit history, getting
a credit line with few fees attached is no big deal. However, for those who have
made poor spending decisions in the past, a card provider generally charges a
higher up-front fee to compensate for the higher risk that the borrower will
skip out on the bill.
But with those fees capped, the card companies have two options: they can
stop providing cards to customers with lower credit scores, or they can raise
interest rates. One card issuer, called First Premier, chose the latter option:
they lowered their annual fee to $75 (from a previous $256), and raised interest
rates to an unheard-of 79.9 percent. That’s nearly seven times the APR of an
average credit card.
Some news stories blamed First Premier for bilking consumers, but this ire is
misdirected. A credit company can’t remain in business long if they’re always
lending and never being repaid. Whether it’s through higher fees or higher
interest rates, the company has to be compensated for the greater risk of
lending to those with poor credit histories. And if well-intentioned legislators
decided to cap both fees and rates, companies like First Premier would find
themselves out of business – and many Americans would find themselves out of any
credit at all.
You can see another example of regulation-run-amok in our storied
“laboratories of democracy” across the nation. Many state legislators have voted
to limit short-term (or “payday”) lenders, either through an outright ban or
through caps on the interest rates the lenders can charge. This industry has no
shortage of critics, and new regulations have been popping up all over the
country.
But, again, legislators have neglected to consider unintended consequences.
“Payday” lenders play an important role for millions of people who may not have
access to a traditional line of credit. If, for instance, a prohibitive rate cap
forces these lenders out of a state, consumers in need of credit seek funds from
riskier sources (e.g. loan sharks) or end up defaulting on their financial
obligations. It’s no surprise that a study by the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York found that states that have banned payday lenders – including Georgia and
North Carolina – saw an increase in bounced checks and higher rates of
bankruptcy.
The moral of the story isn’t that every government regulation is bad; it just
means that the world isn’t as cut-and-dried as our political talking points make
it out to be. Corruption on Wall Street and spiraling consumer debt are both
serious problems that need real solutions. But if policy decisions are based on
emotional arguments instead of economic facts, ham-fisted government
interventions are more likely to create new problems than to fix the old ones.
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