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Credit Cards in the world of
taxpayer-owned banks
“meet the new boss. Same as the
old boss.
-The Who
The American people ponied up $700 billion to supposedly
bail out some big banks on Wall Street.
So far, we have not seen the
banks what banks are supposed to do, lend
people money. Instead they are
doing the thing that Wall Street raiders do,
take over other companies.
Bush and Paulsen encouraged bad behavior in their bailout
bill. They gave big banks money and tax incentives to gobble up
small banks. They made sure that their
buddies on Wall Street were taken care of.
Most big banks didn’t need bad behavior encouragement. They’ve been able to do harmful things long before the government started subsiding
them.
Some of the biggest abuses come in the way that banks have handed out
credit cards. Now that I, like every
other American taxpayer, indirectly owns
part of the Wall Street banks, I want to
talk to them about how they have been acting.
I want to do is to
throw credit card companies off every college campus. Is it any wonder that the banks needed a $700
billion bailout? What kind of business
gives huge lines of credit to students who don’t have jobs?
I always thought that you had to have a job to get
credit. Not anymore. I have a college student in my
household. He has minimal income, no
assets and big student loans. However, the credit card companies love
him. He gets ten times more mail than I
do. All of them “pre approved” credit
cards. All go straight in the trash.
Its bad for the college students to run up debt before they
have jobs. Its bad for the nation to have a generation of college
graduates paying off high interest credit
cards instead of saving money to buy
houses and cars.
Giving cards to college students couldn’t have been that great of a business or the banks wouldn’t have needed a bailout.
I saw an article in the New York Times that said that credit
cards were the next problem area for the banks.
DUH!
Some of the biggest abuses come in the way that banks have handed out
credit cards. Now that I, like every
other American taxpayer, indirectly owns
part of the Wall Street banks, I want to
talk to them about how they have been acting.
I want to do is to
throw credit card companies off every college campus. Is it any wonder that the banks needed a $700
billion bailout? What kind of business
gives huge lines of credit to students who don’t have jobs?
I always thought that you had to have a job to get
credit. Not anymore. I have a college student in my
household. He has minimal income, no
assets and big student loans. However, the credit card companies love
him. He gets ten times more mail than I
do. All of them “pre approved” credit
cards. All go straight in the trash.
Its bad for the college students to run up debt before they
have jobs. Its bad for the nation to have a generation of college
graduates paying off high interest credit
cards instead of saving money to buy
houses and cars.
Giving cards to college students couldn’t have been that great of a business or the banks wouldn’t have needed a bailout.
We’ve had years of students, people coming out of bankruptcy
and people with no income getting tons of credit cards. Usually with interest rates and fees that
would make a loan shark blush.
Since they are
getting multi million dollars bonuses, executives at Wall Street banks should have figured out what most of us know. Broke people don’t pay loans back.
You can charge them all the interest and fees that you
want. If they don’t have any money, they
are not going to give any to you.
Especially if you are an unsecured debtor like a credit card.
People will make an extra effort to hang on to secured
debts, like their houses and cars. The
credit cards will be last in line.
We are now in an economy where a lot of people who were
barely hanging on will get closer to the edge.
You see people losing their jobs or going
from high paying jobs to minimum wages.
You see people who counted on the value of their house or 401k plan
being suddenly disappointed.
We see a lot of people worried about feeding their families
and keeping a roof over their heads.
When it comes to feeding your family or paying your credit
card, the family is going to win every
time.
I hope the banks factored that reality in before the came up with the $700 billion
figure. They might want to hang on to
some of that taxpayer cash instead of using it to buy other banks.
As bad as people are projecting, it will get worse. Recent
events will change how people feel about debt.
People who got stuck with high interest credit cards aren’t
going to be in a hurry to pay them off. Even if they can.
Banks had two things going for them in collecting credit
card debts. They could shame people by
embarrassing them in front of their neighbors and they could threaten to hurt
their credit scores.
Its going to be hard for a bank that was bailed out by
taxpayers to shame anyone into anything.
Since people with good credit can’t get loans, there is no incentive for someone with bad
credit to even bother. They can default
on their debt and make the banks come after them.
I’ve tried to collect from someone who was determined not to
pay me. It was expensive, time consuming
and I never did get all my money. Try
multiplying that by a few million people.
That is what the big banks are going to be dealing with.
From a moral standpoint,
I want banks to clean up their act in the credit card department. Since many of the bankers work for me, and
the rest of the American taxpayers, I’d
like to protect my investment by making sure the credit card issuers get out of
the stupidity game.
I can’t afford to give them another $700 billion.
Don McNay
is the founder of McNay Settlement Group and the author of the book Son of a Son of A Gambler: Winners, Losers and What to Do When You Win
the Lottery. You can write to him at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
or read other things he has
written at www.donmcnay.com He is a contributor to the Huffington Post and Treasurer of the National Society of Newspaper Columnists.
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