Congress Could Swipe Your Credit Card Reward Points
Sens. Dick Durbin and J.D. Vance want to put the Federal Reserve in charge of credit card reward programs.

A plot to kill credit card reward points has bipartisan buy-in, with lawmakers framing the effort as an attempt to curb still-stubborn inflation.
Don't bank on it.
Sens. Dick Durbin (D–Ill.) and J.D. Vance (R–Ohio) are two of the leading sponsors of the Credit Card Competition Act, which would artificially cap so-called swipe fees charged by credit card companies such as Visa, Mastercard, and American Express. Those fees, which range from about 1.2 percent to over 3 percent of the transaction, cover the credit providers' overhead costs, including fraud protection. They also fund the reward programs that many credit cards now offer as consumer incentives, where every dollar spent translates into points that can be redeemed for flights, free stuff, or cold hard cash.
Even though swipe fees amount to just pennies on the dollar, they add up to big bucks fast because Americans use their credit cards a lot—150 million times per day in 2022. All those swipes allowed Visa and Mastercard, the two networks that handle the majority of transactions, to collect more than $93 billion in fees that year, according to the senators pushing the reforms.
Durbin, Vance, and other advocates for limiting swipe fees argue those higher costs are ultimately passed on to consumers. They're probably right about that. But their proposal, which would cap those fees and give the Federal Reserve the power to force credit card companies to change how rewards programs are structured, seems likely to cause unintended consequences that will backfire on the very consumers they are aiming to help.
That's not a theoretical fear. It's exactly what happened after Congress imposed similar limits on debit card swipe fees as part of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the major overhaul of financial regulations passed in 2010.
As part of that law, fees charged on debit card payments were capped. Within the first year, average fees fell from 44 cents to 24 cents per swipe. In response, banks largely did away with debit reward programs and other consumer benefits such as free checking accounts.
Ultimately, both consumers and merchants lost. A 2013 study by three economists at the University of Chicago found that merchants saved $7 billion annually from the elimination of fees, but those savings were not passed onto consumers. Instead, "consumers lost more on the bank side than they gained on the merchant side" and ended up losing more than $22 billion in potential benefits.
A 2022 study by researchers at Georgetown University and Yale Law School found the collapse of debit card rewards programs nudged consumers to use credit cards more often—credit cards that charged higher swipe fees, thus undercutting merchants' savings from capping debit card fees.
The mastermind behind that provision of the Dodd-Frank law? None other than Durbin, who is now leading the crusade to repeat his own mistake.
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It was not a mistake.
It wasn't even an unintended consequence. It was just part of the omelet called government control. That some poor sods lost money is just part of the omelet. No one wants every omelet looking exactly the same, as if they had been cooked in a mold from powdered eggs.
The control gained was so well received in Congress that Durbin merely wants to repeat the
orgasmomelet experience.The real "unintended" consequence is to get the government even deeper into your finances.
How else can we have (and pay for) Democracy?
Government is like mold, creeping in everywhere and causing it to become poison. This country needs a lot of bleach.
i like this analogy. simile? i can never keep those straight!
One thing we can be sure of. It's not literally.
Well, given the amount of the country's blood which is being poisoned, yes. Maybe there is a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning?
As part of that law, fees charged on debit card payments were capped. Within the first year, average fees fell from 44 cents to 24 cents per swipe. In response, banks largely did away with debit reward programs and other consumer benefits such as free checking accounts.
I don't want a reward program. I want a simple, cheap way of moving my money around. When I shop at a local business where I know the owner, I'd rather have him pay a smaller fee. When I pay a big bill with a credit card I don't want a 2.5% "convenience fee" in return for a 1% kickback.
I know it's not very libertarian of me, but I will be happy when regulators strangle the rewards industry.
I haven’t read the bill, but the rewards program strangulation seems a potential knock on effect, not the actual point. Who knows how the politically entrenched industries and financial institutions (who probably sponsored this bill) will actually react.
Fuck that. I run as much of my monthly e-pay bills through my Cabellas card and a couple times a year I use the reward points to buy a gun or some other large item. Got a nice shotgun last time and bought my wife a small frame Walther 9mm a few years back. My other card I use for automotive work and the points I build up pay for most of my ebay purchases.
If you're so worried about the pennies on the dollar your local merchant pays then do all your business in cash.
And you already have all the power you need to go to your bank and get a non-rewards card. The fact that you don't want to be bothered is not our problem.
There's always the option of little green pieces of paper. Those have no fee for the business owner. I'd appreciate it if you didn't do the strangling though. I rather enjoy not having paid for a hotel room over the past decade.
Fuck yeah, I forgot about that. We have a travel rewards card and man was that nice. Sure it takes some micro management but my wife is great at that. Not having to pay for last minute hotel stays when I was in the hospital kept us from bankruptcy.
“where I know the owner”. So your friend “The Owner” refuses to give you a cash discount on the swipe fee?
If you really want to reduce the fees that your local merchant has to pay (and maybe save yourself some interest costs in the process), there's a thing called "cash" that you might want to look into.
It's a win-win, some shops even give a discount for customers who pay that in that manner.
So they are implementing a program that will save tons of money for businesses that accept credit card payments (like Amazon and Walmart) and are telling us the cost savings will be passed on, that it will "tickle down," if you will, to the consumers?
Interesting, intersting.
Good catch. Looks like another instance of Baptists and bootleggers.
The politicians are bragging to the Baptists that they're going to save consumers money, meanwhile the bootleggers (Amazon, Walmart etc) are laughing all the way to the bank.
I feel certain that credit card fees, (which have always existed), are now causing inflation. That makes total sense.
That and the Greedflation I just read about in my Google feed. Nothing at all the government did. They are blameless. It's "Big Credit" and "Corporate Greed" to blame.
MAGAflation?
Oh fuck, don't give them ideas. If I see that in a fucking commercial for Biden or some other Democrat then buddy, we will have words. Most of them 4 letters...
It’s the “break up the big banks” identity theft acceleration act.
About the only thing that apparently isn't "causing inflation" is the expansion of the Federal Reserve Balance Sheet from around $900Billion in 2008 to almost $9Trillion at its peak in 2022.
Weimar Germany didn't print as much money relative to the size of their economy as the USA did during the Obama Administration (and then again to fund the profligate waste that was "Covid Relief"), but if there's one thing that we can be certain of it's that two decades of increasingly easy monetary policy has not in any way contributed to or created one of the principal and most predictable after-effects of dramatic increases to the "money supply".
Mission creep is rolling. Solid asset backing your labored assets like Gold and Silver were thrown out so fake-paper printers could steal your labors. Now; the fake-paper money market checks-and-balances need to go too so the criminals can wipe-out all your earnings.
I’d reckon the mid range game is some sort of half assed social credit gleichschaltung. The long game always being control.
I have always wondered why the fees are a percentage instead of a flat fee, since the computers can send a huge number as fast and cheaply as a small number. It doesn't cost more to process a million dollars than to process ten dollars.
Oh, I know!
Let the government take over processing all the transactions, for free! And, just to be sure, outlaw cash.
I've been on the merchant side of credit cards. The fees are a miniscule part of doing business. Figuring the fucking sales tax on merchandise and sending the proper amounts to the state, county and city governments quarterly is more of a pain in the ass and the wallet.
I have always wondered why the fees are a percentage instead of a flat fee, since the computers can send a huge number as fast and cheaply as a small number. It doesn’t cost more to process a million dollars than to process ten dollars.
Probably for the same reason that long distance calls used to cost a lot of money even though they didn’t cost the phone company an extra dime. Because they have the monopoly which means they can, so fuck you. That’s why.
Yeah, I’m into giving Tonys and Xis new pop up bank my personal information, identity for a credit card.
Most likely explanation for why CC fees are a percentage of all purchases is that they can be.
The thing with the cost of long distance phone calls back in the olden days is that the market rate for "access" to a LD service was pretty much set to virtually (or actually) nothing, but the companies laying in the infrastructure to carry those calls still had to recoup their investments. It's true that the marginal cost of any particular minute of usage was limited to the cost of the electricity used, but Sprint and MCI weren't collecting up-font for the cost of constructing their own networks and the FCC was probably dictating fees for AT&T as well as they were for the "baby bells".
Before that era, the FCC was dictating more or less any aspect of AT&T's business practice that they chose to. The regulation that the Dems have had such a hard-on to impose on cable-based ISPs since 2012 is the set of rules which were established to manage the inherent monopoly that was held by "the phone company" from the rollout of telephone service until the early 1980s when they were split up in an anti-trust action.
Fees are a percentage because the fees cover fraud protection, the higher the transaction amount, the greater exposure risk.
Which Article or Amendment to the Constitution authorizes this?
Here's the abridged version of the Constitution that government uses.
"Congress shall do everything necessary and proper to promote the general welfare and regulate commerce, unless the pesky bill of rights says it can't."
Our government is no longer one of enumerated powers protecting unenumerated rights.
Rather it's one of powers limited only by enumerated rights.
"Rather it’s one of powers limited only by enumerated rights."
And even then only if they think it's a "real" right.
Only if they think they can get away with violating that right without losing the next election. They never look any further ahead than that.
Oh! Oh! Oh! I know this one!
Interstate Commerce Clause.
Right... I sense the sarcasm in there.
But even at that no amount of BS the left makes-up makes that apply to my Locally owned credit card bank.
Never-mind the premise of it is taken completely out of described purpose (to prevent State-to-State government import/export battles) as well as making-up the idea that a money transfer is supposedly ‘commerce’ or that regulation of trade is an equivalent to price-fixing.
JD Vance, Trump's Own handpicked candidate, is now in a deal with Democrats to put the Federal Reserve in charge of your credit cards.
What the fuck happened to conservatives?
They were primaried?
This isn't a recent change. It's been their way for decades. They just need to tie it to sin somehow. Greed I guess is enough of a sin.
But credit card fees and points are just a wealth transfer system, mostly from poor to rich.
Where do Democrats stand on that now?
I don’t know where Democrats stand. Wealthy people will set up new markets for lines of credit and use cash in secure neighborhoods. The wealthy actually “subsidize” the ACCESS to credit for low incomes through rewards. Just like the wealthy pay the majority of taxes in the country, the top ten percent in particular.
Low incomes will switch to cash only if access to credit dries up. Gangs will take note, rob poor people and rural Ohio will become the new south Bronx.
That day ‘poor’ and ‘rich’ were politically transformed into human genes that had the inalienably way of preventing the ‘poor’ from processing transactions due to their compulsive victim-hood DNA.
Or … maybe it was just an excuse to use Gov-Guns and take what they didn’t want to Earn/Do themselves.
How far are we from a universal government credit card? Just think how convenient that would be for easing the national debt, and rewarding good social behavior.
What happened to Vance? In Hillbilly Elegy he argues that pay day loans can help working people who had a setback in paying a bill. Credit cards are just pay day loans. When wealthy people set up new lines of credit and ditch credit cards altogether, it’ll be harder to get a credit card, or higher monthly compound interest rates will outstrip the fees.
Don't worry. I'm sure he will switch back just as soon as Trump perceives public sentiment leans in that direction. It's not like he has any principles left to compromise!
+1
"Congress Could Swipe Your Credit Card Reward Points."
Why not?
Congress has been swiping our money for well over a century now.
Once you realize the who purpose of fiat money is to allow the government to steal your money, you realize that inflation truly is a feature and not a bug.
What I still have to study up on is whether William Jennings Bryan ("Thou shalt not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold") was a economic fool, or a disingenuous politician".
They also fund the reward programs that many credit cards now offer as consumer incentives, where every dollar spent translates into points that can be redeemed for flights, free stuff, or cold hard cash.
Which is so friggin' predatory it should be illegal.