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4月23日 Consumer Protection Legislation for Credit Card CompaniesObama met with credit card company executives on the heals of legislation passing the House. The new law, a little late in coming, will go into effect in 2010 and will limit fees and prevent arbitrary interest rate increases. The very thing companies have been doing to consumers for the past several months -- raising rates, adding fees. Millions of consumers have been affected since this practice began in late 2007, making the credit card companies BILLIONS of dollars in additional revenue from the increased fees.
For instance, I have an account with Wells Fargo I use for emergencies. When I got the account, the selling point was that the interest rate was based on the prime rate. Meaning, if the prime rate went up, so could my interest rate for my card. I have excellent credit and the interest rate was a good rate. When the banking system dumped last year and the prime rate went down, I got a letter from Wells Fargo telling me that they were changing their terms and raised my interest rate 4%. The prime rate went down. Not up. My interest rate, per my agreement with Wells Fargo, should have went down as well. Needless to say, I payed off the small balance I'd been carrying and closed the account. Their loss.
I'm in a fortunate situation though. Many Americans aren't. I was able to pay the account off and tell them to shove it. Many Americans can't do that. I heard of one consumer who called their credit card company to complain about the doubling of their interest rate. In retribution, the company reduced their credit limit to the current balance, effectively wiping out the credit line. The reduction of credit appeared on their credit report, affecting their credit score. I guess it's a negative thing to have your credit limit reduced -- even when it's done to punish a complaining customer.
I applaud the current administration for taking action, but it's like closing the gate after the cows get out. It should have been passed as an emergency with a provision requiring companies to revert everyone back to where they were. By the time the new law goes into effect, more credit card holders will see major increases in interest rates and fees. Some customers have reported interest rates doubling, not only on new purchases, but on existing balances for purchases made under the old rates.
I guess we can hold out for hope. Maybe the credit card companies will grow a conscience and realize that they're screwing the socks off of their customers. Maybe they'll feel bad about it and voluntarily reduce rates and fees back to where they were when the credit card was issued to the consumer. Oh wait. These are the same companies that took OUR bailout money to save their companies and then gave themselves bonuses for a job well done.
Nevermind.
3月20日 Enforce Transparency in our GovernmentIt has been a volatile week in the U.S. That goes without saying, I think. From questionable uses of the taxpayer bailout money to the executive bonuses paid to not only the AIG execs, but other companies paid out bonuses as well. The same companies the taxpayers have mortgaged their futures – and our children’s future – for. Even though President Obama is willing to take blame for some of the problems, it still remains to be seen who all were involved in allowing the mis-appropriation to be made to begin with. Senator Dodd? Liddy? The Treasury Department? I think they were all responsible for the mess to a degree. One thing’s for sure. We can’t settle for the “blame me” game. That’s just not enough this time. The people who caused the problem need to be dealt with in a timely fashion. We need to show the world that we do not condone shady behavior and back alley deals. Remember, this behavior is the same behavior that doomed the previous administration. So, in my honest opinion, Obama needs to show us really what he meant by “transparency.” He needs to make violators of the policy accountable for their deeds, because we can not – nor should we allow – the continuing tactics of the last administration. 3月15日 AIG pays $165M in executive bonuses? WTF?The failing AIG company received $180 billion in bailout money from the taxpayers. It’s reported that they still paid their executives nearly $220 million in bonuses. How can that happen? What are the bonuses based on? It’s quite obvious that they’re not based on company performance! Tim Geithner, the Treasury Secretary, doesn’t have a good explanation. The next time we give bailout money to a failing company, it shouldn’t be given unless the company receiving the help agrees to suspend all bonus payments until the entire government loan has been repaid. The money-hungry execs who got our economy into this mess do not deserve a bonus. Period. Our government leaders? Either regulate the bonus mess before they’re given our money disguised as a bailout or let them fail. Period! |
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