Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders to unveil new legislation today to take on Wall Street greed. The bill, titled the Loan Shark Act, will cap credit card interest rates at 15 percent.
Today’s loan sharks wear expensive suits and work on Wall Street, where they make hundreds of millions of dollars in total compensation by charging sky-high fees and usurious interest rates,” Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez said in a statement accompanying the plan.
Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez will introduce legislation on Thursday to cap credit card interest rates at 15 percent, a steep reduction from current levels.
Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) will introduce the House version of the bill.
Under the legislation, in addition to an 15 percent federal cap on interest rates, states could establish their own lower limits.
The proposal is sure to meet stiff resistance from the banking industry, which brought in $113 billion in interest and fees from credit cards last year, up 35 percent since 2012, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.
The new legislation would “effectively put the payday-lending industry out of business, paving the way for postal banking.”
The bill is called the Loan Shark Prevention Act, and it’s only two pages long. It includes language that would prevent lenders from adding fees to “evade” the interest rate cap and sets penalties for violators, including a forfeiture of all interest on the illegal loans.
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The real consumer savings from the Loan Shark Prevention Act would come from other short-term, small-dollar loans, which in an age of precarious finances at the low end have become commonplace. Payday loans carry annual percentage rates as high as 667 percent.
“I have a radical idea, maybe Congress should stand up for ordinary people.” Bernie Sanders
The 15 percent cap would be the same as the one Congress imposed on credit unions in 1980, Sanders said. (The National Credit Union Administration, the industry’s regulator, raised that cap to 18 percent in 1987 and has repeatedly renewed it at that higher level.)
Credit card rates have recently reached a record high, according to Creditcards.com, which has been tracking the data since 2007. The median interest rate was 21.36 percent as of last week compared with 20.24 percent at about this point last year and 12.62 percent about 10 years ago, according to Creditcards.com, which compiles data from 100 popular cards
Americans will pay $122 BILLION in credit card interest this year. Thats the equivalent of every household funneling $1,000 to Wall Street.
Rising credit card rates hit those with the lowest credit scores the hardest. “And even small increases in rates can be crippling to a cash strapped borrower, he said. “It is the ultimate slap in the face when you’re already down.”
Watch the conference LIVE TODAY at 12 p ET
Thursday, May 9, 2019 · 4:32:58 PM +00:00 · igualdad
@AOC quotes James Baldwin:
“It’s expensive to be poor” and explains that we must connect the justice component in that communities of color, poor rural communities and poor urban communities live in food deserts, get penalized by corporate banks for having low checking balances, are charged by check cashing centers, or cannot afford health insurance so take out loans with interest for health care.
“It’s so radical? It’s wrong to make a buck off people’s most vulnerable situations.”