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Thursday, December 18, 2008

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New rules adopted for credit cards

Visa credit cards.

Federal regulators have approved new rules to protect consumers from surprise interest rate hikes and fees on their credit cards. But banks say the rules will hurt card holders, whether they have good credit or bad. Nancy Marshall Genzer reports.

Visa credit cards. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

More on The Economy, Spending, America's Financial Crisis

TEXT OF STORY

Tess Vigeland: Chalk this one up for the little guy ? at least the one who plunks down plastic at the store. Today federal regulators approved new rules for the credit card industry. They're meant to protect consumers from surprise interest rate hikes and fees, but banks say they'll hurt card holders, whether they have good or bad credit. Marketplace's Nancy Marshall Genzer explains.


Nancy Marshall Genzer: Dave Guttman pays his credit card bill off every month. But his bank keeps giving him less time to do it.

Dave Guttman: Time from the due date has shrunk from the normal 30 days to 20 billing days.

The new rules say credit card companies have to give consumers 21 days to pay. They can't apply payments to high-interest debts last. And companies won't be able to change the terms of your credit card based on your track record with other bills. Banks say as a result even people with good credit will pay higher rates because it will be harder to judge a person's credit risk.

Scott Talbott: Those people who manage their credit well, will pay an interest rate that's too high for their risk profile and that will in turn subsidize those borrowers who have trouble managing their credit.

That's Scott Talbott of the Financial Services Roundtable. He says banks need more elastic rules for plastic. But Gail Hillebrand of Consumers Union says banks will use the new rules as an excuse to raise rates. And she doesn't think the regulations do enough for borrowers in trouble. For example, low rates still skyrocket permanently if you're late once, even if you mend your ways.

Gail Hillebrand: There's no requirement that after you paid on time at the high rate for six months or 12 months, that you get your old rate back. So that's unfinished business that needs to be addressed.

Unfinished business that Hillebrand says Congress can wrap up. Lawmakers could also speed things up. Right now, the new rules don't go into effect until July of 2010.

In Washington, I'm Nancy Marshall Genzer for Marketplace.

Comments

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  • By Edward Mendoza

    From Shelby Township, MI, 12/18/2008

    I hope this new reform bill regulating the credit card industry will help the consumer. At the way the economy is going, there is no reason for banks to implement such high, astronomical, interest rates. Other than declaring bankruptcy, the cardholder would have to die to completely write off or pay off the debt.

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