Big Bankers Mounting Sneak Attack on Consumers

by: Jim Hightower  |  AlterNet

Big Bankers Mounting Sneak Attack on Consumers
(Photo: Reuters)

    The largest banking chains are going out of their way to stiff us.

    Have you received your thank-you note? I'm still waiting for mine.

    More than a year into the Wall Street bailout, I've yet to get any sort of "thank you" from even a single one of the big banks that you and I propped up with $12 trillion in direct giveaways, indirect giveaways, government guarantees and sweetheart loans. You'd think their mommas would've taught them better. But I've begun to think that waiting on a simple gesture of banker gratitude is like waiting on Donald Trump to have a good hair day -- ain't gonna happen.

    Far from showing appreciation, the largest banking chains are now going out of their way to stiff us. Instead of nice notes, they are quietly slipping new gotchas into our monthly credit card bills and bank statements. In June, for example, Bank of America abruptly raised its fee for a basic checking account by 50 percent. Citibank jacked up the interest rate on some of its cards to 29.99 percent. And JPMorgan Chase more than doubled the required minimum payment on its cards.

    Across the board, fees have skyrocketed to their highest levels on record, including assessments for such common occurrences as overdrafts (as high as $39), stop-payment actions ($39 -- double what it was 10 years ago), balance transfers (up more than 50 percent in the past year) and ATM use (nearly doubled in 10 years).

    To add insult to injury, the banks blame us for their rate increases. Because the economy is such a wreck (massive job losses, falling incomes, millions of home foreclosures and other unpleasantness), industry spokesmen say there is a greater risk that customers will bounce checks or fall behind on their credit-card payments. Thus, claim purse-lipped bankers, they must protect themselves from us by ratcheting up rates and fees. "There is an increased riskiness around repayment because of the recession," spaketh one lobbyist for the financial giants.

    Glade doesn't make enough "Spring Lilac" to cover up the stench of this argument. Come on -- it was the greed and incompetence of Mr. Jolly Banker that wrecked our economy, caused the recession and forced the odious bailout on us. They want us to pay for that?

    The truth is, they are socking it to their customers for two reasons: 1) they can, and 2) fee hikes are a shifty way to snatch enormous levels of new income for themselves without doing anything to earn it.

    These are the geniuses who made an ugly mess of the core business of banking -- which is to make good loans. To make up for their huge losses in that business, bankers have essentially been reduced to flim-flam fee-scammers. Last year, assessment of consumer fees became the main business of banks, totaling 53 percent of the industry's income!

    That was before the current outbreak of fee frenzy. In the first three months of this year, for example, Bank of America's fee income rose 50 percent above the same period of 2008 -- an extra $4 billion in revenue for the bank.

    "Fees 'R' Us" is what big banks have become. This is why they are panicked by reforms presently coming out of Washington. Already, President Obama has signed a bill to restrict credit-card gouging, and Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan (which control about 58 percent of the nation's credit-card market) are scrambling to jack up their rates and fees before the new law takes effect next February.

    Now, the bankers are lobbying frantically to kill Obama's plan to create a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which would have regulatory power to prohibit a wide range of finance-industry abuses. For the first time, we consumers would have our own seat at the regulatory table -- an agency with the independence and clout to counter the Federal Reserve and other agencies that primarily serve big banks.

    From the bailout to the explosion in fees, we've seen that Wall Street's financial titans won't control their greed. For the sake of the economy, the well-being of America's majority and the advancement of our nation's democratic values, we must do it for them. For more information, contact Americans for Financial Reform: www.ourfinancialsecurity.org.

    --------

    Jim Hightower is a national radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the new book, "Swim Against the Current: Even a Dead Fish Can Go With the Flow." (Wiley, March 2008) He publishes the monthly "Hightower Lowdown," co-edited by Phillip Frazer.

All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.





     

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ANOTHER TRICK BANKS PLAY,

ANOTHER TRICK BANKS PLAY, THIS HAPPENED TO US THIS PAST WEEK, IS PUTTING A HOLD ON ELECTRONIC PAYMENTS TO YOUR ACCOUNT. oUR BANK TOLD US THE MONEY WAS CLEAR, BOTH THE ATM AND THE INTERNAL ACCOUNTING TOLD US (CLERK) FUNDS WERE AVAILABLE, YET THERE WAS A DOUBLE HOLD ON OUR ELECTRONIC TRANSFER (NOT ONE BUT TWO INEXPLICABLE HOLDS) THAT CAUSED TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS IN OVER DRAFT FEES THAT SHOULD NEVER HAVE HAPPENED. WHEN THE BRANCH VICE-PRESIDENT WAS CONFRONTED WITH THESE BOGUS BANK CHARGE BOUNCES HIS RESPONSE WAS, "I CAN TRY TO GET THEM REVERSED, BUT I DOUBT IT WILL HAPPEN." THIS IS THEFT. NOT BY SOMEONE STEALING IDENTITY OR BANK INFORMATION, BUT DIRECTLY BY THE BANK. THE BANK IS REGIONS, BY THE WAY. I WILL NO LONGER PUT MY MONEY IN THEIR BANK.


Let the banks control

Let the banks control themselves; they will do so in the best interests of their customers and the nation. Conversely, if regulators are necessary, let the banks appoint them. They will do so responsibly. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!


Indeed, this is like the

Indeed, this is like the person who murders his parents asking the court for mercy because he's an orphan. This era of gotcha capitalism cost us all endless hours of scrutinizing every document. I thought government was there to help the average citizen so that we don't have to watch our backs every waking minute. What kind of a life is this, what kind of a society do we live in when every aspect of our lives we have to look at the fine print in what has become an increasingly complex society? One suggestion: banks and other agencies that change their "contracts" with us (a one-sided deal if there ever was one) should at the very least be required to put any changes in BOLD PRINT, maybe even RED BOLD PRINT, so that the consumers who are being robbed will at least have a chance at knowing they are being robbed.


The greedy creeps need to

The greedy creeps need to have their wings clipped!


Woody Guthrie observed that

Woody Guthrie observed that some men rob you with a gun and some with a fountain pen. The banks are victimizing the citizens of this country. When will our cowardly politicians do something about it? If they have sold us out, we need to get rid of them. As Zapata said, it's better to die on your feet than to live on your knees. Politicians of both parties must be voted out of office if they continue to collaborate with the crooks who run the banking syndicates. The Justice Department must prosecute those who have violated laws, and we must demand new laws that will protect us from these criminals. W stuck a dagger in this country with his anti-bankruptcy scheme, and we need statesmen (and stateswomen) who can reverse the damage. We have fought heroically against external tyrants. Will we be brought down by internal parasites?


There is nothing these

There is nothing these corporate entities did here that wasn`t attempted in the past with the same result only on a US domestic scale aka The Crash of 1929! To paraphrase the narrator of; Jack "Sgt Joe Friday"Webb`s old show Dragnet...only the trough hogs names have changed to once again fleece the innocent.


How about using the local

How about using the local credit union? Keeps the money in town and you can talk to the people in charge... which is you.


Credit Unions! I can't

Credit Unions! I can't emphasize this enough. I have had what little money I possess in one since the small neighborhood savings and loan banks were screwed out of business by the Bush boys back in the 1980's. Banks are our enemy. Why do business with them? Cut your credit cards in half, do your banking with a local (or progressive national) credit union and just watch how things change in a hurry. I'm doing this! Will you all join me? Let's starve these monsters.


Uppity woman is right!

Uppity woman is right! Credit unions are a much better deal. Doing business with them is a viable alternative to feeding the bloodsuckers at the banks. To the person who bemoaned having to read the fine (oh, so very fine) print on everything, I agree to the soles of my feet. I hate what this country has become. Citizens no longer exist; we are "consumers". I am sick and tired of being treated like a shill and of living in a land where every waking moments is about commercial interest. I am not a consumer and my life is not a commodity. I want the dignity of being a citizen back.


About 5 years ago I became

About 5 years ago I became disillusioned with my bank, which became an interstate monstrosity such that I couldn't stomach doing business there. I then took a chance on a CREDIT UNION. Whoa! What a difference! My credit union does everything but scratch my back. They only make reasonable loans, funds are more secure, they are on the consumer's side (OWNED by the customers!) they make things easy for all of us--free service, good loan terms, the best answers for all financial needs, and free seminars for members. Don't walk, RUN to your neighborhood credit union. The banks will never behave so long as they can "own" the world--don't give them your money.


I've got a simple fix: All

I've got a simple fix: All of us peasants, everyone last one of us, simply stop making payments to credit cards, bank loans, taxes, etcetera; stop making payments to any crooked establishment. If we ALL do it, what can do they do but cry and whine?


Fairness in Banking Act

Fairness in Banking Act (author me): The formation, interpretation, and other treatment of all contracts between banks and consumers (including business credit and depository accounts) shall conform to the Uniform Commercial Code. All other statutes inconsistent with this Act are hereby repealed.


Short term gain tends to

Short term gain tends to distract from long term sensibilities. Borrowers and lenders are both at risk of this. Then of course, when the negative consequences of short term gain do come, the desire for more short run gain tends to rushin again, distracting from the next bout of long term consequences. To truly maximize gain and minimize risk, I think we all need to take a longer run view of whatever we're involved with.


We too bank with a Credit

We too bank with a Credit Union and I have been a strong supporter for many year. BUT -- when I ran against a ultra-Right winger last year the Credit Union association here in CA would not endorse me. They backed him despite my being a very strong candidate. On a political level they tend to support the Right. BE CAREFUL and maybe get involved in your local Credit Union's governance. They should be supporting candidates that support the people because the people own them.


"I thought government was

"I thought government was there to help the average citizen so that we don't have to watch our backs every waking minute." ## That only happens when citizens take up their responsibility to find, put in office and support honest people who act for the common good. If government is corrupt, the people have only themselves to blame for it. If the people are themselves corrupt, what good can one expect of a government which arises from the people?