Credit card debt has increased steadily. Since the late
1990s, lawmakers, consumer advocacy groups, college officials and other higher education affiliates have become increasingly concerned about the rising use of credit cards among college students. The major credit card companies have been accused of targeting a younger audience, especially college students, many of whom are already in debt with college tuition fees and college loans and who typically are less experienced at managing their own finances. Credit card debt may also negatively affect their grades as they are likely to work more both part and full-time positions.
Another controversial area is the universal default feature of many
North American credit card contracts. When a cardholder is late paying a particular credit card issuer, that card's interest rate can be raised, often considerably. With universal default, a customer's other credit cards, for which the customer may be current on payments, may also have their rates and/or credit limit changed. The universal default feature allows creditors to periodically check cardholders' credit portfolios to view trade, allowing these other institutions to decrease the credit limit and/or increase rates on cardholders who may be late with another credit card issuer. Being late on one credit card will potentially affect all the cardholder's credit cards. Citibank voluntarily stopped this practice in
March 2007 and
Chase stopped the practice in
November 2007.
The fact that credit card companies can change the interest rate on debts that were incurred when a different rate of interest was in place is similar to adjustable rate mortgages where interest rates on current debt may rise. However, in both cases, this is agreed to in advance, and is a trade off that allows a lower initial rate as well as the possibility of an even lower rate (mortgages, if interest rates fall) or perpetually keeping a below-market rate (credit cards, if the user makes their debt payments on time). The universal default practice was encouraged by federal regulators, particularly those at the
Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (
OCC), as a means of managing the changing risk profiles of cardholders.
Another controversial area is the trailing interest issue.
Trailing interest is the practice of charging interest on the entire bill no matter what percentage of it is paid.
US Senator Carl Levin raised the issue of millions of
Americans affected by hidden fees, compounding interest and cryptic terms. Their woes were heard in a
Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations hearing which was chaired by
Senator Levin, who said that he intends to keep the spotlight on credit card companies and that legislative action may be necessary to purge the industry. In 2009, the
C.A.R.D. Act was signed into law, enacting protections for many of the issues Levin had raised
.
In the United States, some have called for
Congress to enact additional regulations on the industry to expand the disclosure box clearly disclosing rate hikes, use plain language, incorporate balance payoff disclosures, and also to outlaw universal default. At a congress hearing around March 1,
2007, Citibank announced it would no longer practice this, effective immediately. Opponents of such regulation argue that customers must become more proactive and self-responsible in evaluating and negotiating terms with credit providers. Some of the nation's influential top credit card issuers, which are among the top fifty corporate contributors to political campaigns, successfully opposed it.
In the
United Kingdom, merchants won the right through The
Credit Cards (
Price Discrimination)
Order 1990 to charge customers different prices according to the payment method.
As of 2007, the United Kingdom was one of the world's most credit-card-intensive countries, with
2.4 credit cards per consumer, according to the
UK Payments Administration Ltd.
In the United States until
1984, federal law prohibited surcharges on card transactions. Although the federal
Truth in Lending Act provisions that prohibited surcharges expired that year, a number of states have since enacted laws that continue to outlaw the practice;
California,
Colorado,
Connecticut,
Florida,
Kansas,
Massachusetts,
Maine, New York,
Oklahoma, and
Texas have laws against surcharges. As of
2006, the United States probably had one of the world's highest if not the top ratio of credit cards per capita, with 984 million bank-issued
Visa and MasterCard credit card and debit card accounts alone for an adult population of roughly
220 million people. The credit card per US capita ratio was nearly
4:1 as of
2003 and as high as
5:1 as of 2006.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_card
- published: 18 May 2015
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