The Bipartisan War on Prices Is Coming for Your Credit Card
The strange new alliance between democratic socialists and nationalist populists isn't a sign of political healing. It's a sign that people have lost their grip on basic economics.
In a scene that perfectly captures the strangeness of American politics today, President Donald Trump, a billionaire and self-styled champion of American business (at least the ones he likes) was all smiles during an Oval Office visit from Zohran Mamdani, the democratic socialist and mayor-elect of New York City.
For months, the two men traded the harshest of insults. Mamdani was a "communist" and "radical left lunatic"; Trump a "fascist" and "despot." Yet with New York's mayoral election over and cameras clicking, the insults were on hold. The men praised each other as "rational" and "productive." Trump even joked that Mamdani might "surprise some conservative people."
Give them points for collegiality, just don't be surprised. Trump and Mamdani are only the latest example of the right and the left converging on economic issues. One likes price floors, the other likes rent control. They're both waging the same "war on prices," as the Cato Institute's Ryan Bourne calls it. And this war enjoys rising bipartisan support.
Take legislation introduced earlier this year by what would have once been an unlikely duo: Sens. Josh Hawley (R–Mo.) and Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.). Their "10 Percent Credit Card Interest Rate Cap Act"—also reflecting a Trump idea from the 2024 campaign—sounds compassionate. Who enjoys paying 25 percent interest?
In practice, price controls of all sorts are disastrous. Credit card interest rates are high because unsecured consumer lending is very risky. They're the price for the lender taking a chance on a person. If the government artificially caps rates far below the market rate, banks will stop lending to riskier borrowers. That doesn't just mean broke shopaholics. It includes the working single parent using a financial last resort before payday.
Just as rent controls can create a housing shortage by reducing the attractiveness of supplying those homes, interest-rate caps can create a credit shortage. They put millions of working-class Americans—the people proposals like these are supposed to protect—at risk of being "debanked." Stripped of their credit cards, some will turn to payday lenders, loan sharks, and pawn shops, whose charges are far higher.
It gets worse. A cap this low wouldn't merely shrink credit availability; it would invert it. At 10 percent, banks would only lend to the safest, highest-income borrowers. Credit cards would become a luxury product for the affluent—a financial advantage while everyone else is pushed into the financial shadows.
Then there's the fact that millions of small businesses rely on credit cards. According to a Federal Reserve survey of small businesses, half of employer firms use them to fund operations. Cards function as unsecured working-capital lines for firms that lack collateral or a long credit history. A 10 percent cap would push them toward far costlier and riskier alternatives.
And forget about travel miles or cash back. Those programs are funded by interest charges, which a 10 percent cap would wipe out. When lenders cannot price risk through market rates, they shift the cost to higher fees, shorter grace periods, and more hidden charges. Consumers don't necessarily pay less; they just pay differently and more opaquely.
Finally, because credit cards are the primary way tens of millions of Americans build credit histories, a cap would destroy a crucial ladder into the financial mainstream.
It would be comical if it weren't so harmful. A policy sold as pro-worker could lock millions of workers out of the modern credit economy and transform a household staple into something available only to those with the least need for consumer credit.
Hawley and Sanders rail against credit card companies as "loan sharks" for charging 25 percent interest. As Dominic Pino pointed out a few months ago at National Review, many of their closest political allies in organized labor offer their own members branded credit cards at 15 percent, 20 percent, or even 28 percent.
At the time, the AFL-CIO's "Union Plus" Mastercard ranged up to 25.15 percent. The National Education Association's card reached 28.24 percent. Service Employees International Union (SEIU) members could get a card at 28.99 percent. The Teamsters' card charged 27.49 percent, and Capital One paid the union more than $4 million in royalties to promote it. If 10 percent is the moral ceiling, it's not just credit card companies who are guilty.
The strange new alliance between democratic socialists and nationalist populists isn't a sign of political healing. It's a sign that people have lost their grip on basic economics. They've decided that markets can be bullied, risk forbidden, and prices commanded into submission. But magical thinking still produces real-world shortages when put into practice.
If this is the new bipartisan consensus, the worst thing being capped is common sense.
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My grandmother was right; if you can't pay cash, you can't afford it.
Side issue; when the caps are imposed, and no one has a credit card, what happens to the "no cash" businesses?
My grandmother was right;
This sentence ended with less antisemitism than I expected.
what happens to the "no cash" businesses?
You mean, like, Lyft, Pinterest, and Peloton?
You must not live in one of those places. There are at least a dozen restaurants close to me that refuse cash.
Sports and entertainment stadiums/complexes as well.
Many businesses that removed cash with Covid never went back.
That state parks in my state won't take cash. If you need a bag of ice or a bundle of firewood, you need a card.
How is this legal when the damned fiat money has printed right on it: "This note is legal tender for all debts, public and private"?
If you pay for goods or services before receiving them it isn't a debt.
That has been settled long ago, no business is obligated to take cash. Yes, it is legal tender and can fulfill a debt. No, there is no requirement for it to be used. This is a common mantra among the cash-only conspiracy theorists and simply isn't true.
You must not live in one of those places.
ThatsTheJoke.gif
OK, maybe half the joke. The other half being that Lyft, Pinterest, and Peloton have never turned a profit and the whole thing runs on funny money.
If they are too stupid to convert back to accepting cash, then they probably don't belong in business and the invisible hand of the market will punish them.
Side issue; when the caps are imposed, and no one has a credit card, what happens to the "no cash" businesses?
Easy:
1. They get robbed a lot more often.
2. They add safes which the driver adds cash to and which can only be opened at some main office.
3. More drivers get killed in frustration.
Side issue; when the caps are imposed, and no one has a credit card, what happens to the "no cash" businesses?
Debit cards and prepaids
And fees on debit cards and prepaids will rise.
And credit cards, for the people who still can get them.
What out of touch, obsolete, old people say or said is of no concern to current americans, who are busy progressing against the will of out of touch, obsolete, old people.
“…,,current Americans….”
Haha. Does that include you, fiddy? Have you found a suitable country yet that will sufficiently “care about” you and your pathetic virtue signaling? I wish you luck in your search.
Lol. Run away now, loser. That’ll show us! It doesn’t seem to have helped Rosie O’Donnell much, but maybe you’ll be different.
I'm old, and I'm sure you'd think I'm out of touch. I pay "cash" for everything, in the sense that I pay my credit card off every month and haven't paid interest in many years. My credit score very high and I will always be able to get a credit card as long as they are available at all. However, I know that many people don't have my resources, and sometimes people to have to resort to carrying a credit card balance. I did it when I had three kids in college, and when I had three kids at home and only one income. The utter arrogance of anyone saying "if you can't pay cash you can't afford it" is appalling and insulting to people who didn't have the advantages I had. Just because I'm better off doesn't mean I'm willing the let others starve. In other words, I'm not MAGA.
Please cite examples of people who have recently starved to death in the USA. Don't include dependents who were the victims of intentional abuse by their caretakers, nor those lost in the wilderness.
They take debit cards.
USA becoming Europe; not a good thing as evidence see Europe.
Younger Europeans have a tendency to only carry a phone. All in one digital ID, digital payment, digital driver's license.
Which their governments like, because it means they can turn off your life with a mouse click if they decide they don't like you.
A feature, not a bug.
Yeah, that’s gonna be a no from me dawg.
Finally, because credit cards are the primary way tens of millions of Americans build credit histories, a cap would destroy a crucial ladder into the financial mainstream.
Nobody who pays 25% interest was going to climb up the fiscal ladder. They cannot lose out on something they were incapable of having.
I'm dubious of the number of people who pay 25%. I believe that there are people who owe money at a 25% rate, but between debt consolidation, bankruptcy, and other means of (re)financing, the number of people who wind up paying back the full amount of any given principle + 25% interest is relatively low.
Maybe I'm wrong.
If you don't have a card with 10% before this bill, you won't have one after this bill either.
"In practice, price controls of all sorts are disastrous. Credit card interest rates are high because unsecured consumer lending is very risky."
Yes businesses involved in risk pad themselves to cover the risk and no one can say the credit card companies are struggling.
Price controls are not the same.
"If the government artificially caps rates far below the market rate"
Market rate? Who decides what the market rate is? The Fed?
What did you say about the Community Revitalization Act?
"They're the price for the lender taking a chance on a person. If the government artificially caps rates far below the market rate, banks will stop lending to riskier borrowers."
Obama will find a way to force the lenders to lend...
'The strange new alliance between democratic socialists and nationalist populists isn't a sign of political healing. It's a sign that people have lost their grip on basic economics.'
Who cares? They have strengthened their grip on our political-media machine.
It seems to me that people in government have started acting like Roman senators with unlimited power. It's depressing. They have some kind of plan and they stick to it. But ordinary people don't win in such a deal. All I can hope for now is myself. I have a job and a part-time job as well as a small income from 1xbetapp.live. If the house of cards does collapse, I will have a small backlog of stability.
Hawley is a P.O.S. so all Republicans & Trump are now socialists? BS.
On the other hand, a lot less people with credit cards might not be a bad thing!
It's a sign that people have lost their grip on basic economics
This is what happens in a democracy when people and their spineless representatives discover that they can keep voting themselves bread and circuses.
Funny, no mention of this in all those words.
"As of the third quarter of 2025 (the most recent data available), total credit card debt in the United States stands at $1.233 trillion. This marks a record high, up $24 billion from the second quarter of 2025 and approximately 50% higher than five years ago."
Like the Federal Government and most state governments most Americans do not have a revenue problem, they have a spending problem.