Bureaucrats Are Moving To Cap Bank Overdraft Fees, Which Will Hurt the People It's Meant To Help
Many who see overdraft protection as preferable to other short-term credit options will have fewer choices as some banks decide the service isn't worth offering anymore.

Nobody likes paying fees. A fee, however, is a transparent way to reflect the price of something. And in a market economy, prices convey vital information that consumers and producers use to make good decisions. A rise in the price of apples tells producers that consumers want more apples. This prompts more apple production (and eventually, lower prices). And so when political interference keeps prices from fluctuating freely, the result is inefficiency and waste.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), calling the prices of bank overdraft protection "junk fees," now proposes to interfere with these prices.
We've been down this road before. Last year, the CFPB proposed capping credit card late fees at $8 as part of President Joe Biden's populist appeal to consumers who dislike this cost, which is obviously everyone. The problem, as I and many others explained at the time, is that late fees encourage timely payment, and their practical elimination leaves lenders unable to offset the risk of working with people who have lower credit.
The result will be fewer lines of credit available to those who need credit the most. But that's a difficult outcome for most to see compared to the tangible benefit of lowering fees. Even consumers denied credit won't know what or who to blame, so it's no surprise that CFPB is expected to finalize the late fee rule any day now.
The next CFPB price control scheme would cap overdraft fees at levels as low as $3 per overdraft transaction. Commenting on this rule, Biden sounded perfectly populist: "For too long, some banks have charged exorbitant overdraft fees—sometimes $30 or more—that often hit the most vulnerable Americans the hardest, all while banks pad their bottom lines." He added, "Banks call it a service—I call it exploitation."
I get it. I remember the annoyance I felt when I was charged such fees. However, I reminded myself that it was the price to pay for not having one of my checks bounce or a debit card payment declined. It's fair to wonder whether most of the people proposing these rules have ever had a checking account balance low enough to need the overdraft cushion.
In fact, overdraft protection is an optional, opt-in service that allows consumers to spend money they don't have at the bank's expense. Purchases are approved that would otherwise be declined for lack of funds. For low-income consumers, this service is sometimes vital. And indeed, consumers report by wide margins that they are glad it exists even though it naturally comes at a cost.
Thankfully for all of us, CFPB bureaucrats agree that banks should charge a fee. Unfortunately, they think they know best what these fees should be. They think they know the exact costs of honoring charges for customers with negative balances better than the banks do. And remember, because banking is competitive, any bank that charges excessive overdraft fees will lose customers to banks that don't. That $30 fee per overdraft transaction is the price that emerged among the competitive forces that keep prices lower than they could be.
Because of bureaucratic interference, many who see overdraft protection as preferable to other short-term credit options, such as payday lending or high credit card balances, will have fewer choices as some banks decide that the service isn't worth offering at the price deemed appropriate by government officials.
Banks might go even further. Given the slim profit margins they earn on small bank accounts, it's possible that the loss of overdraft protection revenue results in some simply abandoning the very customers—the least well off—whom interventionists claim to be protecting.
This frequent political problem—failing to consider how policy interventions alter incentives in ways that produce bad outcomes—extends well beyond the realm of finance. The United States education system, for instance, is collapsing in part because school boards across the country have decided that graduation rates were the most important metric to track success and are now frequently used to determine funding. So school administrators responded by boosting graduation rates in the simplest and most obvious manner: by making it all but impossible for students to fail. Students, in turn, have largely stopped trying. Graduation rates are up, but learning is down.
Politicians and bureaucrats appear not to be learning much, either. When planners make ham-fisted attempts to alter complex systems or intervene in markets, results rarely match their expectations.
COPYRIGHT 2024 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
What blasphemy is this?
God and His anointed know what it best for us all!
How dare you question the wisdom of our Gods and Masters?!?
Fast and easiest way to makes more than $500 per day online. Start earning extra cash by qA working easy job online from home. Last month i made $17542 from this job and i am doing this job for only 2 hours a day online. Every person can get this and start making more cash simply by going to this website and follow... instruction........> http://Www.Bizwork1.com
The result will be fewer lines of credit available to those who need credit the most.
Those who "need credit the most???" Um, define that please.
Credit isn't need-based. (Nothing is need-based, nor should it be!) Credit is a privilege extended to a person once they've illustrated their trustworthiness in financial responsibility. It involves a measurable degree of risk management on the part of the creditor offering you the line, and that measure doesn't take into account how much the borrower "needs" it.
We learned this the hard way when we offered sub-prime lending. Boom, massive spike in foreclosure, repossession, and bankruptcy.
I don't watch a lot of TV, but I recall a commercial a few years (or more than that) that absolutely infuriated me. It showed a black family trying to plan a vacation for their costumed kids begging to go to wherever, with stacks of bills that were keeping them from it, shaking their heads in disappointment - and suddenly, a credit card offer plays on their television. 0% APR for the first 12 months, cash back rewards, blah blah blah - and they look at each other with huge smiles. Cut to the scene of them enjoying their family vacation. Which they clearly financed with no indication of how they'd repay it. I damn near hurled my controller at the TV, because what the hell kind of sick predatory advertisement is that!?
You do NOT give credit to people who "need it the most." The same way you don't offer health insurance to people who are ALREADY sick. That's a terrible investment with near-guaranteed loss on return. You give credit to people who you determine are very reasonably certain to PAY IT BACK. With interest, if you're looking to profit off the lending.
Purchases are approved that would otherwise be declined for lack of funds. For low-income consumers, this service is sometimes vital. And indeed, consumers report by wide margins that they are glad it exists even though it naturally comes at a cost.
Yea, because that $20 purchase that you overdraft because it's "vital" is absolutely worth 150% markup to get it right then and there.
So stupid.
What the devil are you ranting about? You seem to be all over the map in this comment, I cannot tell what you are angry about or who you are angry at.
Start with plain old liberty. It's their bank, their business. If customers don't like $30 overdraft fees, find a different bank, or don't write checks when you don't have the balance to cover them.
And maybe you have just never been a human who has made a mistake, like misremembering your account balance and writing a check which you'd rather be cashed even if it costs you $30 more because you don't want the knock-on effects of a bounced check which has its own fees.
Or maybe you assumed a deposit would go through sooner that it actually does.
Go fly a kite off a short pier.
The only thing I actually dislike is how banks do withdrawals prior to deposits at end of day if scheduled. So if deposits were done first, there would have been no overdraft. Also ordering largest to cheapest to maximize number if hits.
I use a local credit union that does neither. Then again my over draft protection for my checking account is my savings account.
Same here. My credit union does transactions in real time. If it receives a debit at 10:03 am, then it is withdrawn from my account at that time. If it receives a deposit at 9:58 am, then it deposits at that time. There have been times when a deposit went through after a bill on autopay, and it resulted in an overdraft, but I prefer that to them being able to manipulate things to make the fees higher. (Or even if it just looks that way to me, and they weren't really doing anything nefarious.)
I also have my savings and a line of credit as backups for overdrafts. Basically, if you manage your money well, you can avoid them. And if you just don't have enough money or credit to have the buffer to avoid overdrafts, then that is just the way it goes. The alternative to an overdraft is for the attempted debit to be rejected, which could mean not only does your electric bill not get paid, but they could charge you a fee in addition to what the bank would.
I would agree with this criticism of banking practices. Banks have a right charge overdraft fee and in the amount they choose. The banking customer should know this and act accordingly to avoid the overdrafts. But I do thinks banks have an obligation to minimize the impact of overdraft by doing deposits first and by ordering withdrawals from lowest to highest.
Wells Fargo is bad about this. When was with Bank of America, they were downright awful about doing it.
"Those who “need credit the most???” Um, define that please."
Roger, wilco! "Need" is defined by the person who wants to borrow the money, not by the person whom xhe wants to borrow it from. I can afford to buy a new crock pot but I don't want to pay cash for it so I want to borrow the money and spread the payments out over a few months and can afford to pay the interest on the loan.
If the bank can't charge fees to cover overdrafts they might not be willing to loan me the money. I NEED to borrow the money but cannot because Congress MEDDLED in something that was none of their business. All clear now?
Somehow the world managed without overdraft fees before the 1990s.
Essentially it's charging $25-50 for a $100 or so (maybe less) "loan"
You'd be better off going to a loan shark.
That’s because banks didn’t allow you to overdraft before the 90s. You’d still pay a $25-50 fee or more (for the bounced check) and sometimes have to pay two of them (one to your bank and one to whomever you wrote the check to) but not receive any service in return. It was simply a deterrent fee, to encourage you to manage your account so you don’t write bad checks. So overdraft coverage seems like an improvement in that respect.
Banks absolutely charged overdraft fees prior to the 90s. Before online access to your account overdraft notices came by snail mail days later by which time there could be more on the way. Happened to me several times in the early 80s. And as noted businesses also charged fees for NSF checks. The lesson is still the same. Don't buy shit if you don't have the money.
My bank you had to opt in to overdraft protection in the 90s. Now you have to opt out if you dont want it.
There definitely were overdraft fees before 1990. I got burned by Bank of America which offered the first automatic deposit of paychecks as early as 1973. They deliberately held these deposits if there were checks outstanding. While the deposit was supposed to be made Thursday night, it was held until Monday morning to allow overdraft fees on checks written on Friday.
This practice got so bad at one branch that the company I worked for threatened to end their relationship with B of A if this wasn’t remedied. The branch’s major officer suddenly “left” the bank and the problem disappeared.
The fee back then was a mere 3 dollars. However, the checks involved for me were never more that 20 dollars.
Overdraft protection goes back well before the 1990s. But, yes, the world did survive.
Now, let's look at how it survived. Without overdraft protection, when you tried to make a purchase beyond your balance, the purchase was summarily declined. It didn't matter how badly you needed the gas or the baby formula, nor did it matter that it was the bank's fault that your paycheck deposit was delayed. You were simply refused the good or service.
Yes, you can think of it as a short term loan. (That's all any credit is.) And, yes, that $30 "origination fee" looks big compared to the amount of the loan. But that mostly represents the fixed cost of processing the loan, not interest. No, you will not find better rates at a loan shark. But even if you could, I preferred to do business with someone for whom "sending me to collection" didn't include breaking my kneecaps.
The result will be fewer lines of credit available to those who need credit the most.
People who can't pay their bills on time absolutely do not need more credit.
This is reason. Where freedom is freedom from consequences.
Don't like overdraft fees? Try this: don't write checks if you don't have the money in your account. There's this great new tool called "arithmetic".
Sadly, that tool is racist, so no one will use it.
"Politicians and bureaucrats appear not to be learning much, either."
Actually, they have learned that shit like this has no real downside, other than a few snarky editorials, and it furthers the fascist goals.
Arguing about what the CFPB should or shouldn't be doing, ignores the fact that the CFPB is a brand new outfit that shouldn't exist and is the brainchild of the economically illiterate Elizabeth Warren.
Anyone with half a brain would want the thing dismantled as quickly as is legally possible.
^THIS^ It's an illegal (UN-Constitutional) Nazi-Empire agency.
I’d be happy if it got dismantled by any means necessary (that’s the Democrat way, right?).
The most effective response is to elect Trump.
From the economic side, my Grandma was the expert.
"If you can't pay cash, you can't afford it."
"Given the slim profit margins they earn on small bank accounts, it's possible that the loss of overdraft protection revenue results in some simply abandoning the very customers—the least well off—whom interventionists claim to be protecting."
Not to worry. Congress will pass a law making it illegal for banks to refuse to open checking or credit card accounts for any customers.
Nah, Congress will just make minimum balances illegal or something like that, so then banks will start doing credit checks or requiring a payroll direct deposit for an account. That way it stays "broken," the people they were supposed to help are worse off, and they can keep using it as a campaign issue for years to come.
They will just hit you with a Fair Lending violation for “disparate impact.” If a Bank tightens its credit standards, that means it is declining more applicants than it did previously.
The CFPB will absolutely look at the demographics of those “new declines,” and if they don’t match the national percentage breakdowns by race, etc., they will claim the tightened credit standards have a disparate impact on a protected class, and therefore violate ECOA.
It’s utterly absurd. They hit one bank (Hudson, I believe), with fair lending violations because their brick-and-mortar locations were “disproportionately” located in more affluent, more Caucasian areas. They completely ignored that it makes sense for banks to be located near their target clientele—people with enough money to regularly seek banking services.
The CFPB is the absolute worst.
Veronique de Rugy, thank you for consistently providing sanity in the mad world of economics. I am glad that you moved to the US, although you may be wondering why you made that move right now.
You are aware that the majority of the commentariat hates her because she's very critical of Trump's policies, right?
So fucking broken.
How many times have you called her a leftist for supporting free trade and the free movement of people? A hundred? A thousand?
Yet another reason to shun banks and go with a credit union.
WOW! So much bigotry and racism, did you write this while your Klan hood was in the wash? Government needs to go further and ban consequences entirely as well as noticing things that run counter to the chosen experts or other misinformation. I've been assured that following the advise of Top Men is always in my best interests and will never create other problems because they are experts and know better.
The US Government doing price fixing?
Say it isn't so..........
Oh that's right. Supposedly "our democracy" makes the [Na]tional So[zi]alism work this time even if it violates/destroys the Supreme Law of the land (the very definition of a USA).
The temptation to meddle is almost irresistible for some people. Those people are attracted like a moth to a flame to the ultimate meddler, the government. That's why the Founders tried - and failed - to construct a government system limited in scope and power to try to minimize the amount of meddling done by government and government officials. When I was young there was a popular service called "The Book of the Month Club." Although the popularity of printed paper books may have waned since then, government officials have managed to implement an even more impressive feat: "The Scapegoat of the Month Club." Now any narcissistic, power-hungry official meddler can grab the mic and the spotlight for a week or two by charging anyone from Soup, Inc. to Nuts, PLC with doing harm to the public by providing a service and charging all that the market will bear for it! Oh, the horrors!
The article and the commenters are confusing overdraft fees with overdraft protection fees. Different things.
Overdraft fees and overdraft protection fees *are* the same thing. You might be confusing overdraft fees and non-sufficient funds fees though.
Or you might be making up your own terminology. I'm old enough to remember when overdraft protection didn't exist, but overdraft fees did.
Sometimes Reason has their head so far up their ass. In theory, yes,. overdraft fees would be market driven and based on value, of course "in theory" communism should work. The reality is that they are usually just a money grab by corporations in cahoots. In a market, consumers would get information and choice between banks that were competing for thier business. In some cases, that is true, but in many markets, the big banks are the only game, and they all collude.
Been getting a lot of milage from this quote in the last 2 days or so.
"Where socialism sought totalitarian control of a society’s economic processes through direct state operation of the means of production, fascism sought that control indirectly, through domination of nominally private owners. Where socialism nationalized property explicitly, fascism did so implicitly, by requiring owners to use their property in the “national interest”—that is, as the autocratic authority conceived it. (Nevertheless, a few industries were operated by the state.) Where socialism abolished all market relations outright, fascism left the appearance of market relations while planning all economic activities. Where socialism abolished money and prices, fascism controlled the monetary system and set all prices and wages politically. In doing all this, fascism denatured the marketplace. Entrepreneurship was abolished. State ministries, rather than consumers, determined what was produced and under what conditions.
Under fascism, the state, through official cartels, controlled all aspects of manufacturing, commerce, finance, and agriculture. Planning boards set product lines, production levels, prices, wages, working conditions, and the size of firms. Licensing was ubiquitous; no economic activity could be undertaken without government permission.
https://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/Fascism.html
Will be fun watching banks just shut down debit cards and debit transactions that would result in overdrafts. Then people will be out in public when their cards get rejected. Some may not care, but some will be mortified and demand that their banks allow them to overdraw. Banks will say, nah, not for $3 we're not.
That's how it used to be. Your check would just bounce, and your bank would charge you a penalty for that.
Than you would get a fee from the bank and the company that bounced your check.
Yes. Only happened to me once—because my paycheck bounced.
"A rise in the price of apples tells producers that consumers want more apples."
Goodbye overdraft fee.
Hello, higher monthly fee.
how about you manage your money properly. don't spend more that you have and you won't need overdraft or short term loans. in a word, be an adult.
Most libertarians respond wrongly to this type of regulation, because they fail to see that the problem of outrageous NSF fees is itself the result of overregulation. When a line of business is so controlled that telling consumers "go start your own bank!" is telling them to do the impossible, then that line of business is effectively a monopoly and banks need to be made to do the right thing, at least until they can be deregulated enough that you or I could start one.
Up to about 1980, banks got along just fine on the interest they received on the loans they made. The change-over to "soak the poor" policies (which is what high NSF fees are) as the source of nearly all profit for banks did not need to happen and should never have been allowed in the first place. It made banking no longer an honorable job, so screw those who pretend it's necessary.