The Government Wants To Cap Credit Card Late Fees. It Will Hurt the Poor.
Delayed payments will increase, and companies will respond by raising interest rates—or denying low-income applicants outright.

Any parent will tell you that forcing children to eat their spinach is no way to win a household popularity contest. Children don't care about the long-term benefits of eating healthy food when the alternative is the short-term thrill of sugary treats. Much to their children's chagrin, parents impose rules, like limiting the quantity of treats and making their receipt contingent upon finishing a healthy meal. Good behavior must be encouraged with appropriate incentives.
Fortunately for parents, their authority does not derive from the consent of the governed. But imagine for a moment if it did. Children could appeal unpopular parental decisions to some higher authority that needs their strong support. Not only would it be hard to maintain the "no treats before dinner" rule, but there could also be a complete banishment of spinach—maybe even all veggies. Kids would cheer the results, but their future adult selves will come to regret it.
This is functionally what's happening at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). The CFPB has proposed limiting banking and credit card late fees to $8 per overdraft as part of a larger effort to eliminate the misleadingly labeled "junk fees." In this case the "junk fee" is the $25 to $35 fee credit card issuers impose for overdue payments. Credit card companies collect an estimated $14 billion in late fees annually.
According to CFPB director Rohit Chopra, "junk fees make it harder for us to choose the best product or service because the true cost is hidden," hence the $8 cap, which consumers who have been hit with the fees will cheer. However, what people want and what is good for them is not necessarily the same.
Consumers like paying late fees even less than children like eating spinach. In a utopian world, no one would ever pay late fees. Everyone would only spend the money they have—no one would be late on their payments in the first place. In the real world, however, people often want, and sometimes need, to make purchases on credit. And unfortunately, those same people are sometimes late in making their minimum credit card payments. Ironically, the reason people can easily borrow money on credit cards and pay late is because of late fees. No less importantly, the reason why people try to be timely in repaying is also because of burdensome late fees.
The ability to levy appropriately stiff late fees is an important part of the overall consumer credit system. Placing arbitrary limits on such fees might prove popular with consumers today but will also leave these same consumers worse off tomorrow. Companies use heavy fees to discourage late payments. While the actual fee provides some amount of income, its chief function is to lower and offset the risks of lending. Companies would prefer that payments arrive on time rather than having to collect late fees.
Proper risk management doesn't just benefit financial institutions. Individuals considered risky are still able to access credit because of contractual terms like late fees. Lighten the fees and delayed payments will increase, making lending money riskier for institutions. When that happens, the only tools left to manage risk will be higher interest rates—which means higher costs even for responsible borrowers—or outright denials of low-income credit card applicants.
Rob Nichols, president of the American Bankers Association, similarly predicts that "credit card issuers will be forced to adjust to the new risks by reducing credit lines, tightening standards for new accounts and raising APRs for all consumers, including the millions who pay on time."
Late fees are already capped at a maximum $30 for a first late payment and $41 for any subsequent violations. Although the current rules impose what are essentially price controls, a large enough difference in degree becomes a difference in kind. The much stricter $8 cap can be expected to have much more pronounced negative consequences, especially for low-income consumers. Economic history is replete with examples of price controls leading to shortages. In this case, putting a ceiling on the price card issuers can charge for late payments will inflict most of its damage on low-income consumers who can least afford to lose credit.
The Biden administration, wanting a cheap political win, is counting on consumers being overjoyed with the sugary treat of lower late fees. But we see again that wanting something does not mean that it's good for you. Preventing or severely limiting the ability of financial institutions to assess appropriate late fees will hurt consumers who can least afford it.
COPYRIGHT 2023 CREATORS.COM.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
LOL @ anyone who makes payments less than the total balance..
My ex was always making late payments, not because she couldn't pay off her balance, but because she was just to lazy to write out and send in the payment on time. Her credit card use/abuse is one of the biggest reasons we are divorced.
My ex used to mock me for paying my bills on time. She's wait until the last second and was often late. I managed to get us both debt-free by the time we split, and when we had to fill out financials for the court during the divorce she had already racked up thousands of dollars in new debt (while I had saved thousands). Just shows you can take the trash out of the trailer, but you can't take the trailer out of the trash.
Youre not debt free. You just bought a car and bragged about it. On credit.
Keep your lies straight.
Lay off on sarc. It's early and he's only a bottle of jack in
It's sad to see such guff from De Rugy.
Thank you for sharing such information, its very helpful for those people who are not able to pay bill on particular date or week.
you can also use this website to remind the CC payment - Week number Calculate - https://weekoftheyeartoday.com/
If you can't trust the government to make financial decisions that affect us all, who can you trust? They've done such a bang-up job with their own finances after all.
You think they'll also reduce the penalties for paying your taxes late?
Given the rates of childhood obesity in the US, this seems as good as any analogy for the state of fiscal responsiblity in America.
I would like it if the rules of federal goverment debt applied to me
Yeah! I would love to be able to endlessly borrow money from the Federal Reserve in order to pay off my debts! As long as no-one else has the same privilege. That would cause hyperinflation. Whereas I’m super responsible and would never inflate the dollar into oblivion.
And I'm sure the Federal Government is also super responsible. That's why they have this privilege. It's not like they're already over $20 trillion in debt.
You racist! Credit cards--and not paying bills--are human rights!
Yeah! How dare these racists want people to be penalised for not paying off their debts! They just don't care about the poor!
The Biden administration, wanting a cheap political win, is counting on consumers being overjoyed with the sugary treat of lower late fees.
The Biden administration wants to lower fees? The administration with three of the four largest bank failures in America history on its watch? The administration advocating reckless policy after reckless policy resulting in the discount rate going up 2000% since taking office? The administration pushing policies that have resulted in an inflation rate that would make a South American caudillo blush, that Biden administration?
After the 2008 financial crisis, over-the-limit fees were changed to an opt-in system. This saved many poor people from ruin because a single $1 over-the-limit purchase could spiral into years of paying only the $35+ monthly over-the-limit fee every month in perpetuity and never being able to use the card again for purchases unless they could pay not only all of the accrued over-the-limit fees and enough payment of the principal to get below the credit limit. Generally this would never happen and the account would go into default within a year.
Who is to say that the poor are worse off without access to a sub-prime credit card account? As someone who has a lot of experience with sub-prime accounts and low credit scores, nothing is worse than the bondage of high cost debt.
Sub-prime consumers have little leverage. I applaud this late fee change as much as I did the over-the-limit changes. It will prevent a lot more suffering than it will create. Again, I speak as someone who has had nothing but low credit scores and sub-prime accounts for my entire adult life (20 years). Saying that the poor will be hurt by reduced access to sub prime lending is insane. The thing is though, the poor won't have reduced access to sub prime credit card accounts. There is too much money to be made.
As usual, De Rugy is clueless to how people of modest means actually live!
People use subprime borrowing because it's the best option for them. These people are adults who can make their own decisions and don't need the government making decisions for them or removing options.
It's not as bad as the minimum wage, but it's still bad.
>>and sometimes need, to make purchases on credit.
not certain this rings true.
Junk fees: when i was in college, my checking balance was always on the thin side. But let’s say I had 50 dollars in it and used my card to go to mcdonalds on Friday (8dollars); bought a 12pack of beer (10dollars). But on Saturday i spent 40 dollars on hookers and blow.
The bank would then re-order the transactions so that instead of the one overdraft fee for the Saturday purchase that put me under 0.00 I would get hit with three 25 dollars fees and instead of being -8dollars (or even -$33 with the single 25dollar overdraft fee) I would be negative $-83 come Monday.
I always thought that was stupid since the date and time of each transaction were clearly tracked and that the bank could have denied the Sat transaction for insufficient funds. The two Fri transactions should have never triggered overdraft fees considering i had sufficient funds to cover those transactions at time of purchase.
Whatever rules were in place that allowed what happened to me to happen at all were fucked.
the rationale my bank put in its agreements was that it assumed big purchases are more important and more harmful to the customer if they bounce, so they put those through first.
its just a nice convenience that this also results in 3 overdrafts instead of 1 and 3x the fees for the bank. there is no conflict of interest!
40 dollars on hookers and blow? That must have been one clapped-out hooker, and the blow must have been more stepped on than a game of Twister.
Its just a saying. I didn't need hookers in college and couldn't afford blow. The point was the re-ordering of transactions to trigger more overdraft fees.
There are caps on interest rates. Do they also hurt the poor?
Not only do you not have a RIGHT to a credit card, you don't even have a right to a bank account. That puts regulation of banks and credit cards at least two steps out of the Constitutional purview of the Federal government, not that any officials care whether their activities are constitutional or not. Of course whether those unconstitutional regulations make sense or not is almost a moot point at this point in the chain of logic, but then we all know that logic is a tool of the oppressor, amIright?
No judgement here windycity, it just sounded like a bargain basement price for certain vices, carry on.
Regarding credit card late fees, just eat the rich. And the Reason editorialists while we're at it.
The CFPB's analysis and resulting rationale are fatally flawed by excluding credit losses. In other words, the CFPB assumes that 100% of late fees are paid. Anyone with any knowledge of credit risk management knows that is inaccurate. Over 75% of late fees charged never get collected. The CFPB is aware of this, yet ignores it to justify its assertion. It is not an uncommon characteristic of CFPB "analyses".
Or maybe DICTATOR KING Biden signs a ROYAL DECREE that those of us with good credit have to pay extra fees to cover the DEADBEATS.
More like "everything will be free in the future because the billionaires will be paying for it."
Or maybe SUPREME EMPEROR DICTATOR KING JOE BIDEN OF THE NINTH REALM signs an INTERNATIONAL EMERGENCY ABSOLUTELY LEGAL SUPREME ROYAL DECREE that those of us with good credit have to pay EXTRA FEES to cover the DEPLORABLE IRRESPONSIBLE DEADBEAT LOSERS!!!