Government Help Hurts
Opinion Editorial by John Stossel -
May 28, 2009
30 ratings from readers
Credit card companies are a demagogue's dream come true. What better way to win public affection than to blame the bankers? But the question is, will doing so help "the poor" — or ultimately hurt them?
“Rate hikes and late fee traps have to end. No more fine print,
no more confusing terms and conditions,” said President Obama when advocating
another big-government solution — this time to evils committed by
credit-card companies.
Credit cards are a demagogue’s dream come true. What better way
to win public affection than to rail against banks for their harsh
terms? In the politicians’ morality play, creditors are the
villains and debtors their helpless victims.
A little context first: No one has a natural right to a credit
card. Someone has to be willing to undertake the risk in issuing it.
Banks issue cards in their quest for profits. Nothing wrong with
that.
Think about what a credit card is. It’s convenient access to
unsecured loans, permitting consumers to buy things large and small —
not to mention emergency services — without cash. Pay the bill
promptly, and you enjoy a fantastic service for virtually nothing. If
circumstances prevent you from paying the bill in full, you can set
your own payment schedule, realizing there is a minimum payment and
that you will be charged interest on the unpaid balance. No surprise
there.
To appreciate credit cards, it is worth recalling that before they
came along, people got personal loans from banks, finance companies,
pawnshops and loan sharks. Such loans were less convenient, and
repayment was less flexible. Some people bought things on layaway,
which meant they didn’t take the goods home until they were paid
for. Loan sharks sometimes broke people’s legs.
Credit cards didn’t create consumer debt — they are merely a
superior alternative to older methods.
As President Obama and other politicians demagogue this issue,
keep two things in mind: Life would be more difficult without credit
cards, and banks don’t have to keep issuing them. Be careful what
you ask for.
Politicians are too short-sighted and vote-hungry to say such
things. They want a “credit card holders’ bill of rights” that would prohibit certain billing
practices, like raising interest rates on existing balances.
Understandably, these billing practices endear themselves to no
one, but competition makes the worst of them far less common. And as
for raising rates, revolving credit means that a balance is a fresh
loan each month; as the terms state, the rate can change. If issuers
can never raise rates on existing balances, even when economic
conditions change, they will be likely to charge everyone a higher
rate to make up for the risk.
Todd Zywicki, a professor at George Mason University Law School
and an expert on consumer credit, points out that the credit-card
industry is highly competitive. The web
is full of sites that permit easy comparison shopping. Competition has driven banks to more
precisely match consumer costs to individual risk. In earlier days,
every cardholder paid higher interest rates than today and an annual
fee (a way around usury laws). Now, annual fees are largely gone.
Rates are lower. Late and over-the-limit fees are unpleasant, but
they aren’t charged until a cardholder’s conduct triggers them.
This is not to say credit-card companies never abuse customers, but
as Zywicki notes, “[T]here are ample tools for courts and
regulators to attack deceptive and fraudulent practices on a
case-by-case basis.”
Politicians assume we are ignorant about credit-card terms.
However, Zywicki points to evidence that people who carry credit-card
balances are aware of the interest rate they’re paying, and “those
who carry larger balances are even more likely to ... comparison
shop.”
The “bill of rights” seems designed to prevent people from
getting themselves in over their heads. That motive is honorable, but
government has never been very good at such protection. The law of
unintended consequences cannot be repealed, and what government gives
with one hand, it inadvertently takes away with the other. Increasing
the banks’ costs will make it harder for poorer people to get
credit cards, and that will only push them into costlier forms of
debt, like payday lenders.
I’ve never understood how the poor are helped by limiting their
choices.
John
Stossel is co-anchor of ABC News’ “20/20” and the author of Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media (January 2005) as well as Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the
Shovel — Why Everything You Know Is Wrong (May 2007), which is now available in paperback.