1.05.2010

On card fees

Will Congress Take Another Swipe at Credit Cards?

Excerpt:

The "interchange fee" (sometimes called the "swipe fee") is an element of the price a merchant pays when a consumer uses a credit card for a purchase. Interchange partially compensates the cardholder's bank for the cost and risk of offering payment cards to consumers. This includes clearing costs, billing and collection, fraud recovery, customer service, credit losses, and the resolution of any disputes that might arise from the transaction.

Credit cards generate three basic revenue streams: finance charges, merchant fees, and behavior-based fees such as penalties for late payment. Because annual fees have largely disappeared on standard credit cards, interchange is generally the only compensation issuers receive for the billions of dollars of credit they make available to consumers who pay their balance off every month. Credit unions and community banks, which cater to lower-risk customers who are less prone to revolve balances and pay penalty fees, rely especially heavily on interchange revenues.

Merchants pay, on average, less than 2% of the transaction amount in interchange fees. In exchange, merchants are relieved of the cost and risk associated with running their own in-house credit operations. And they benefit because consumers can make purchases even when they don't have enough cash in their wallets. This deal is voluntarily assumed by merchants who agree to accept payment cards because the benefits exceed these costs.

...

The most important pro-consumer innovation in payment systems of the past two decades has been the general disappearance of annual fees on most credit cards. Cardholders now carry and use multiple cards at little or no cost. The consequences for consumer choice and competition have been profound—card issuers compete for consumer business literally every time they open their wallet to make a purchase.

Annual fees are essentially a tax on card-holding. Policies that produced a return of annual fees would strangle this process of competition by making it more expensive for consumers to hold multiple cards and to switch cards easily. Small businesses, three-quarters of which rely on credit cards, would also have to pay more to maintain access to multiple credit lines, stifling the most potent engine of economic recovery.

Discouraging credit card use would also slow the evolution from a paper-based payment system to a more efficient electronic system. In 2009 the Federal Reserve budgeted $600 million just to print currency (excluding coins). This doesn't even consider the deadweight costs to the economy of cash, such as the time consumers spend making ATM transactions, the cost of paying armed guards to drive around pieces of paper in armored cars, increased crime and tax evasion, or the time spent waiting in the checkout line behind check-writers. Checks are so inefficient that British banks have announced a plan to phase out their use by 2018.


Comments: Would that US Banks phase out checks! I'm one who benefits by not paying an annual fee, the use and convenience of ready credit, and a rewards program!

7 comments:

  1. Another thing that needs to change is how they compute interest. It should be done how Citicards does it, if you don't pay it off at the end of the month, then you pay interest. I have a CC which I don't use at all because they charge interest the moment you make a purchase. I only keep it b/c it was my first and do not wish to have a cancelled card on my credit report.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Dan, We had a GM Master card for a number of years (I think almost 20). I ditched it this past year and got a Chase Visa card.

    That change did not impact my FICO score.

    ReplyDelete
  3. My Chase card is the one that charges me interest. (they also charge a ridiculous amount of interest) Which one of theirs do you have? Maybe I should switch the card from chase I am using.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I have a Chase Sapphire. One very cool thing is that when you call the 800 # on the back of the card .... a real person picks up the phone (no phone menu tree)

    ReplyDelete
  5. I looked at that and thought there was an annual charge. I guess I will look into it again.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I'd also recommend checking out Capital One. Their commercials are annoying, but they give a lot of choices for what's important to you.

    Whatever you choose, definitely go with a card that offers some type of reward program - they're too common not to. Over the past few years we've gotten a couple free ipods and a digital camera from the rewards program on our Citibank card.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I use Citi Dividends and get cash back, but I will look into the chase one so that I could use both if need be and not be charged interest.

    ReplyDelete

Any anonymous comments with links will be rejected. Please do not comment off-topic