> sophisticated individuals profit from reward credit cards at the expense of na¨ıve consumers.
Then in the study:
> Next, we study whether the redistribution across FICO scores is driven by differences in cardholders’ income, suggesting a transfer from poor to rich consumers. Indeed, We adopt the following terminology: “Reward cards” are credit cards that earn either cash back, miles, or points; “classic cards” are credit cards that are do not earn any form of rewards. credit card rewards are often framed as a “reverse Robin Hood” mechanism in which the poor subsidize the rich. Our results, however, show that this explanation is at best incomplete. [...] Thus, high-income consumers with high FICO scores benefit from reward credit cards largely at the expense of high-income consumers with low FICO scores.
The Fed is very careful to differentiate between income and wealth. You can be wealthy with little income and you can have a lot of income but not be wealthy.
While the study points out that high income, high FICO consumers benefit at the expense of high income low FICO consumers, which strictly controls for income as opposed to wealth, ultimately the study concludes what OP said it does, that reward programs transfer wealth from the poor to the rich, and I quote:
>Credit card rewards transfer income from less to more educated, from poorer to richer, and from high- to low minority areas, thereby widening existing spatial disparities.
"We find a redistribution from low- to high-FICO consumers regardless of income."
Poor people have low FICO scores. There are also high-income people with poor FICO scores. Both are involved.
"Thus, high-income consumers with high FICO scores benefit from reward credit cards largely at the expense of high-income consumers with low FICO scores."
The high-income people have much more money, thus have more to contribute to the pool of money going to high-income high-FICO people.
But poor people, who already don't have much money, are also contributing to this pool of money going to high-income high FICO people. And more to the point, it impacts poor people much more, because... they're poor.
So it's not completely the opposite, it's just inaccurate. The poor are subsidizing the rich, and the rich are subsidizing the rich. The difference is, there is a much larger effect on the poor, because... they're poor. They have less access to credit and that lack of access affects them more. A small amount of money lost has a larger impact.
Are any of these people required to open a credit card? If you're poor and low FICO, then you shouldn't have a credit card in the first place, just a debit card. And if you're poor and high FICO, then a credit card will provide you benefits.
It seems like the proposal is to take away rewards for everyone because there's a group of people that can't help themselves. Why not just be more strict about who gets a credit card.
> If you're poor and low FICO, then you shouldn't have a credit card in the first place
The poor need credit cards. Having a credit card is one major way to improve your FICO.
Credit is a critical part of everything from obtaining housing, to lower rates on auto and home loans and insurance, to the ability to pay for necessary life emergencies when you don't have savings (and the poor don't have savings). Having bad credit can even make it difficult to get a bank account, which you'd need for a debit card. People who don't have credit cards often resort to check-cashing stores to cover their expenses, which are predatory and charge exorbitant fees, keeping the poor poor.
> there's a group of people that can't help themselves
I don't know how to say this in a way that will make sense to you, but this idea that "they can't help themselves" or are just "irresponsible", and that's what led to their situation, is wrong. And the idea that they shouldn't get some form of assistance is wrong. It's kind of complicated, and I would need to be typing here for an hour to begin to explain it... There are tens of millions of people in the US alone that struggle every day because of a credit history that they are often not in control of, and predatory businesses that make it impossible to climb out of debt, and basic human livelihood restrictions that are tied to FICO. I really can't stress enough how important it is for the poor to be able to get access to credit and increase their score. Hopefully someone here can suggest a book or article that you can read that will explain it in depth.
People without a credit card are still subsidising those with reward cards, as the high interchange fees are spread out across all of a store's transactions.
I don't see any proposal put forth. I see a study that is observing human behavior.
The behavior being observed is merchants increasing their prices for all consumers to accommodate a subset of consumers who use reward cards, where reward cards end up being a form of income for their holders.
The distribution of consumers who gain the most income from reward cards are those who are more wealthy. The distribution of consumers who lose the most money as a consequence of having to pay higher prices due to said reward cards are the less wealthy. The end result is a transfer of wealth from those less wealthy to those more wealthy.
That is an observation, not a proposal or a judgement. You are welcome to make a judgement or put forth a proposal from that observation but the study itself did not do so.
These programs operate by placing the burden on the vendor who inflates prices and thus even people who pay in cash pay for the programs indirectly. So even if you don't want a card, or can't get one you still pay for it.
Also from the abstract: "We estimate an aggregate annual redistribution of $15 billion from less to more educated, poorer to richer, and high to low minority areas, widening existing disparities"
In the abstract:
> sophisticated individuals profit from reward credit cards at the expense of na¨ıve consumers.
Then in the study:
> Next, we study whether the redistribution across FICO scores is driven by differences in cardholders’ income, suggesting a transfer from poor to rich consumers. Indeed, We adopt the following terminology: “Reward cards” are credit cards that earn either cash back, miles, or points; “classic cards” are credit cards that are do not earn any form of rewards. credit card rewards are often framed as a “reverse Robin Hood” mechanism in which the poor subsidize the rich. Our results, however, show that this explanation is at best incomplete. [...] Thus, high-income consumers with high FICO scores benefit from reward credit cards largely at the expense of high-income consumers with low FICO scores.