Will Consumers Give Up Their Credit-card Protections? 1 comment
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Dear John Thain wonders whether credit-card companies might ask would-be consumers to “voluntarily” opt out of the protections they’ve been given under the new regulations being passed in Washington; their ability to opt back in again would exist in theory but in practice be very hard to find.
I’m not particularly worried that this will happen, because the minute that credit card companies start sending out mailings offering more attractive cards (or cards at all) to people who give up the protections which have just been imposed, there will be such an outcry from both politicians and the media that the companies in question will be forced to back down, or face even more onerous legislation going forwards.
Some protections you’re forced to have: you basically need to open a bank account in a foreign country if you don’t want your funds to be insured by the government. The credit-card protections are like that: they will apply to everybody, whether they want them or not.
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what is your complaint exactly?
that card companies -issuers really- won't make money by approving a charge that puts a card holder over their limit which results in fees?
it is called a limit for a reason and I have yet to hear a reasonable explanation why a card holder would be allowed to go over it without raising their limit.
Here is my prediction fiscal q3 2011 card issuers are doing fine.
debit cards
2 christmas'
2 summer seasons
and oh yeah, an improved economy and those flat screens, coach bags and big watches will be "paid for" with plastic.