The indirect outcome - credit card approvals will become more strict and offer egregious interest rates, effectively locking out lower-income and/or those with poorer credit history.
Then in a decade or so, we'll be having an unnuanced discussion about how racist/classist/elitist credit cards have become.
This discussion is not about the people who had a single missed payment in 5 years... this is designed to "protect" the people who serially don't make payments and ring up a huge amount of so-called "junk fees". The reality is the late fees act as an incentive to make on time payments and keep debt at a manageable level. After all, that is why you make your payments on time, right? Who actually wants to throw away money on fees?
It's not difficult to not use a credit card. I don't understand why we're so focused on removing personal responsibility as-of late, including the discussion around overdraft fees. We need to encourage more "adulting" and less careless irresponsibility. Living on a credit card and missing payments is a very bad financial sign, and it should be discouraged.
While I agree there needs to be incentives to be credit-worthy, isn't that what the credit report is for? I think you'd probably argue the fees are better than it hitting their credit report, but I'm not sure those people would agree. Those late fees are then unable to be paid as well, causing further damage to the credit report than the actual debt. They get punished twice for it.
I have a friend who's in that situation. Medical bills for his entire family have basically crushed him. Without the late fees, he'd be just scraping by with bad credit. With the late fees, he's still got bad credit. But now he's got late fees, too.
> I have a friend who's in that situation. Medical bills for his entire family have basically crushed him. Without the late fees, he'd be just scraping by with bad credit. With the late fees, he's still got bad credit. But now he's got late fees, too.
Whenever I hear these stories, I often think they're made up, or the person has spent zero effort attempting to remedy their situation (and therefore are being financially irresponsible).
Has this friend contacted the hospital/insurer and worked out an affordable payment plan? Universally they'd rather work out an affordable payment plan and get on track vs. not get paid at all. Whatever this friend is doing right now is clearly unsustainable.
What about securing a loan at an affordable monthly payment with longer terms to help lessen the monthly impact on their budget?
There are many options to get back on track - and none of them involve perpetually stacking up late fees.
Yes you are correct, which is why credit card companies should simply not allow for large balances to be accumulated. You are forgetting that prying on the irresponsible is the entire point.
They generally do not. If you are low-income and/or have poor credit history, your approved credit will be relatively small. Even with a $500 credit line, people miss payments.
Often it's the folks with huge credit lines and carry balances that never miss payments...
> You are forgetting that prying on the irresponsible is the entire point.
The credit card market is not inherently bad. Many (most?) people use it responsibly, even if they carry a balance. We don't need to make it harder on responsible people just because some people are irresponsible and don't care to become responsible.
No one ever said credit cards are inherently bad so I'm not sure what you're responding to.
Anyway, credit cards are already harder to get without good credit. And yes it should be harder for people to get credit cards, but that's not in the incentive of the companies which is why they issue them anyways.
This policy seems to cover all credit cards, including those store-branded cards that sign up people with zero credit history and generally offer small limits. People miss those payments too.
> but that's not in the incentive of the companies which is why they issue them anyways
This is a good point. I do not agree we should do anything about it though. People need to learn responsibility, and it's not the government's job to prevent them from being irresponsible.
FTFA: `Millions of Americans could soon see lower credit card bills after a federal rule that caps late fees at $8 a month was finalized on Tuesday by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which estimates that the change will save households $10 billion a year.`
This is the government enabling more irresponsibility.
Who is saving money here? Responsible households, or irresponsible households?
Who misses credit card payments? Responsible people?
> All the government is doing is simply reducing the fees.
Wrong. The government is reducing the consequences of being financially irresponsible. When something has less negative consequences, can we expect to get more or less of it?
Then in a decade or so, we'll be having an unnuanced discussion about how racist/classist/elitist credit cards have become.
This discussion is not about the people who had a single missed payment in 5 years... this is designed to "protect" the people who serially don't make payments and ring up a huge amount of so-called "junk fees". The reality is the late fees act as an incentive to make on time payments and keep debt at a manageable level. After all, that is why you make your payments on time, right? Who actually wants to throw away money on fees?
It's not difficult to not use a credit card. I don't understand why we're so focused on removing personal responsibility as-of late, including the discussion around overdraft fees. We need to encourage more "adulting" and less careless irresponsibility. Living on a credit card and missing payments is a very bad financial sign, and it should be discouraged.