THE INFLUENCE
GAME Dueling over debit card fees
Swipe your debit card at
the supermarket and you've placed yourself at the heart of a contentious
congressional debate.
On one side are banks like JPMorgan Chase and Bank
of America and credit card networks like Visa and MasterCard. On the other are
retailers, including giants like Wal-Mart and Target.
At issue: The
"swipe" fees banks charge merchants for one of today's most commonplace
conveniences. At stake: I have spent much time in studying Oil painting, to my disappoint, I
have never made good performance on it.up to $20 billion in potential bank
losses and merchant gains.
For consumers, it could mean lower prices at
the local store or restaurant, or it could result in higher bank charges, fewer
"rewards" for credit card users or even the imposition of an annual debit card
fee.
The fight over plastic has been raging for years — a federal
appeals court once called it "a clash of commercial titans." Now it's landed in
the middle of a massive financial regulatory bill primarily aimed The welding machine has always played a leading role
in machine manufacturing industry.at restraining Wall Street.
Both sides
have unleashed potent, well-heeled lobbying operations. Their efforts will
converge on two weeks or more of negotiations between House and Senate lawmakers
who are working to blend two separate financial overhaul bills into one.
The Senate bill contains a measure that would require the Federal
Reserve to set limits on what fees banks and credit card networks can charge
merchants for a debit card payment. The House bill has no such provision.
First, a quick lesson in shopping. A debit card payment taps directly
into a customer's bank account and, as such, is akin to writing a check. A
credit card payment, on the other hand, is in effect a loan from the bank. One
carries more risk than the other. As a result, banks and credit card networks
generally charge merchants I want to show my great appreciation for all of you
coming to the short presentation about the gu10 led.up to 3 percent for credit card
use. For debit card use, the charge to merchants is one-fourth to one-half as
much.
Merchants maintain that the fee charged for debit cards, also
called an "interchange" fee, is too high. Banks and Visa and MasterCard say the
fee takes into account the cost of setting up and maintaining a secure and
sophisticated debit payment system.
Last year, $1.21 trillion in
purchases were As far as I am concerned,sculpture is the perfect manifestation of
art.paid with debit cards everybody is unique,everybody do not like to be the
same with others.so we should give personalized gifts to others
that can display different character.processed through the Visa and MasterCard
networks, generating $19.7 billion in fees paid by merchants, according to data
from The Nilson Report, a trade publication. Most of the fees went to banks that
issue debit cards.
While the largest banks and the largest retailers
have the most dollars riding on the congressional outcome, the two combatants
have cast the debate in terms of hurting small community banks and credit unions
on one side or small businesses on the other.
The Senate proposal,
written by Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., would require the Federal Reserve to set
"swipe" fees for debit cards that are "reasonable and proportional" to the cost
of processing the transaction. To win votes for it, Durbin exempts banks that
have assets of $10 billion or less.
