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The Obama Administration Restricts Credit Card Use
Accuracy in Academia ^ | October 10, 2014 | Spencer Irvine

Posted on 10/14/2014 7:50:13 AM PDT by Academiadotorg

The Obama administration is pushing Americans away from credit cards and regular lines of credit in the financial market and pushing them toward loan sharks and other lines of credit, a panel of professors noted at the libertarian think tank Cato Institute. credit cards

Todd Zywicki, law professor at George Mason University and the author of a new book entitled, Consumer Credit and the American Economy, and Anthony Yezer, an economics professor at George Washington University, were on the panel.

Zywicki said, “We’ve had…the most unbelievable assault of economic regulation in my life” under the current administration. Rules put into place by the Durbin Amendment, post-2008 financial crisis, have “driven people out of the mainstream financial system” and said the administration’s next target is payday loans. Without the normal lines of getting credit, Americans are going to learn, “painfully, the lessons of history,” Zywicki said.

The Durbin Amendment, as Zywicki referred to it, was part of the Dodd-Frank 2008 law where it limited the amount of “swipe fees” that debit card companies could charge consumers and affected banks.

Consumer credit and lines of credit are not new issues, Zywicki said, and gave several examples of newspaper headlines from the 1800s from the likes of The New York Times. pointed out how credit is used for necessities such as washing machines, stoves, televisions, and the like. Americans use credit on investments like these, and America has seen its “credit card ownership has risen dramatically… [and its] credit card debt has risen dramatically.” But, Zywicki said that is not the complete story, because credit cards have replaced opening lines of credits at appliance stores and the like. Instead, “the debt service ratio remains constant over time” and “overall debt service ratio today is the same as it was in 1982,” Zywicki said. “A rise in credit card debt is a perfect substitute for installment debt,” or in other words, you put debt on your credit card rather than putting an IOU on a paper with a store clerk or owner. “It replaced the various forms” of credit from the past, he said.

Zywicki argued, “Credit cards are better, a more efficient and less expensive way to borrowing than a finance company, or a bank loan.” This is why the debt ratio has remained constant since the 1980s, he said.

“The way people use credit is rational,” Zywicki added, and credit cards have “unleashed competition in the retail sector.” Where else can consumers be in a situation where “four people [or companies] want my business so bad they’ll give me a subsidy” like rewards on credit cards. When credit cards are not allowed or used, we have to go back to other inefficient lines of credit like in the past. An example is the state of Arkansas, the “pawn shop capital” of America, where there are strict laws against credit cards and this ends up driving Arkansans to other states to purchase goods on credit cards.

Yezer added, “Poor people used to shop in different types of stores” because America used to be “a peddler economy.” With credit cards, people of all socioeconomic classes can shop at a variety of stores. But, he said, “that [peddler] economy is coming back, maybe, we have resurrected it [because] there’s no credit, there’s no interest rate.” He criticized opponents of credit cards, who contend those who do not qualify for credit cards will save their money instead. Yezer said, “Do you really think passing a law stops it?” Instead, consumers will not have lines of credit for purchases and they will most likely not save their money if they don’t have access to credit cards.

He pointed out, as a professor at George Washington, “We are teaching remedial algebra at GW, we’ve had to throw out kids, and we’re not the only ones.” He continued, “A lot of the most selective institutions now have tests to go into the math field because they can’t do the basics.” Yezer lamented, “This is a major problem…especially with consumer credit.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: creditcards; obama
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To: eyeamok

we didn’t but weren’t there some credit cards before then, like Diner’s Club?


21 posted on 10/14/2014 9:11:38 AM PDT by Academiadotorg
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To: eyeamok

“Taken with a grain of salt, because Credit is always BAD, not only does it allow you to buy something you cannot afford, it pulls forward demand for goods and services. WHich means you must keep expanding credit to keep the ball rolling.

Learn to Live within your means, if you do not have the FULL amount necessary to pay for the product, DONT BUY IT.”

Welcome to the 21st century, man from BCE. Credit allows you to even out your payments on items that you had to pay for all at once in the (ancient) past. Without credit, only rich people and old people would have cars. A young college grad just starting out would not be able to hold a job that he couldn’t walk to. And credit saves lives, too. You get to have a needed medical operation when you need it and worry about paying for it later. Just because some people abuse credit doesn’t mean the rest of us should suffer.


22 posted on 10/14/2014 9:22:59 AM PDT by jimmygrace
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To: catnipman

Same here never use one it’s funny when people buy some thing on sale with a credit card they think they made a deal.


23 posted on 10/14/2014 9:24:53 AM PDT by Vaduz
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To: Academiadotorg

I think credit cards are loan sharks. That is why you should keep a 0 balance.


24 posted on 10/14/2014 9:45:51 AM PDT by the_daug
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To: eyeamok

Congratulations on your monetary success in life, you should be proud.

I am not as financially successful as you but I have done well using my strategies taken advantage of credit opportunities, and will continue to do so. As example, I had the cash to buy my last car but chose not to do so since I was offered a 5 yr loan at 0%. Should I have paid cash or did I do the smart thing to use their money interest-free while using the cash to pay down the house mortgage more quickly?


25 posted on 10/14/2014 10:18:52 AM PDT by PTBAA
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To: PTBAA

Buy a car that is a few years old and it is like a big discount.

Cars now will run 200,000 miles and still be reliable.


26 posted on 10/14/2014 10:58:31 AM PDT by Dan(9698)
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To: eyeamok

Credit cards can be a great way to grow a new business. Many a small business person got going with credit card debt.


27 posted on 10/14/2014 11:31:26 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: PTBAA

I did both, I did the Major Debt game 20 years ago but after a while you literally become a prisoner of debt, where any hiccup in your income screws you big time, it just isn’t worth it in the long run, the security of having No Payments makes your earnings taste better while growing faster and giving peace of mind. It allows one to live to work instead of working to live.


28 posted on 10/14/2014 7:10:08 PM PDT by eyeamok
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