With all the talk about scams and frauds and new government regulations, it is disturbing to me that there are still “credit counselors” and mortgage lenders out there preying on the desperate. Many of, if not most of, the credit counselors who offer to get people out of credit card debt are predatory lenders. Some are affiliated with the credit card companies and operate to discourage consumers to declare bankruptcy, even when that financial option might be the best available. Some of these “counselors” often do nothing more than take a fifteen year debt and convert it to a thirty year debt. Yes, the result is “lower monthly costs”, but the overall cost is criminal, and do nothing for the borrower except offer a band-aid for a gunshot wound.
The credit card companies are just as bad. Their slick advertising campaigns mask usurious rates that would have been illegal a few years ago, and quite frankly, I don’t know why they’re not illegal now. They can change rates “at any time, for any reason” provided they notify the card holder of the change. There is a bill pending, the so called “Credit Card Reform Act of 2008” that may attempt to address some of these ills, but there is no mention of limiting rates credit card companies can charge. There is an attempt to end the ubiquitous “double cycle” billing method which averages out the balance from two previous bills, so the consumer gets billed for retroactive interest even if they paid off the balance. (www.money.cnn.com/2008/07/21/pf/consumer) Even though the banking industry is opposed to the changes that this act will attempt to address, most consumer advocates complain that the proposed changes barely scratch the surface of what is needed.
There are still mortgage companies offering 97% mortgages and other financial options that got us into this mess to begin with. It is probably wishful thinking to believe that government can cure these ills. As long as there are people desperate enough, or uneducated enough to borrow money under punitive conditions, there will be lenders available to them. I want to, in the very least, add my voice against such practices. To me, the practices that are currently the norm in the credit card industry are nothing more than a legal scam, as wrong and as damaging as the illegal scams that grab the headlines.
By Myron Gushlak