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OP-ED: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Mick Mulvaney Fights Payday Regulations that Hurt Consumers

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By Charlene Crowell (NNPA Newswire Columnist)

Every day, American school children are taught about this country’s founding. Untold generations were taught that in a democracy, government is “of, by, and for the people.”

Yet, when it comes to consumer finance, some who serve in government seem to have forgotten whom they work for.

Mick Mulvaney, the illegally appointed Acting Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), is a glaring example of one who appears to consistently relegate the financial concerns of America’s people, in favor of businesses that harm instead of help consumers. His support of the payday and small-dollar lending industry is a prime example.

In January, Mulvaney announced it was time to “reconsider” the Bureau’s payday rule that was announced by his predecessor, after five years of public forums, research and more than one million comments.

In addition, he also encouraged the industry to apply for waivers that would exempt them from the rule’s first deadline this April.

More recently, he publicly sided again with the payday industry’s efforts by joining the leading payday lenders’ association, in filing a joint motion to delay the compliance date for the CFPB’s rule on payday loans for 445 days after the final judgement of litigation, challenging the rule.

Among consumer advocates, Mulvaney’s actions are as unprecedented as they are bizarre. For more than a decade, research by the Center for Responsible Lending (CRL) has consistently found that these small-dollar loans pick the pockets of working people at a rate of $8 billion in fees ever year.

Weighing in on Mulvaney’s contentious actions, Jose Alcoff, Payday Campaign Manager with Americans for Financial Reform also noted the standard, yet questionable behavior.

“Mick Mulvaney has been doing the bidding of payday lenders for years; but putting the CFPB’s weight behind a joint legal motion with their lobbyists is a new low, even for him,” Alcoff said.

In addition, both Scott B. Astrada, CRL’s Director of Federal Advocacy and Lauren Saunders, Associate Director at the National Consumer Law Center also weighed in with some of their concerns.

“It is appalling that an agency with a primary mission of protecting consumers is now teaming up with a payday lending industry that is notorious for trapping people in debt,” Astrada said.

“It is despicable that the consumer bureau’s interim director Mick Mulvaney is colluding with payday lending lobbyists who push unconscionable loans up to 400 percent annual interest on struggling families who can least afford it,” Saunders continued.

This multibillion-dollar industry has launched a legal challenge to a rule that provides only two basic provisions: an ability to repay, and payment protections.

The first requires lenders to make a reasonable determination before loan approval, that consumers can afford to repay the loan. The latter provision denies lenders from taking repayment from checking accounts after two consecutive efforts failed.

Though the average payday loan may only be $365. It still comes with an average triple-digit interest rate of 361 percent and $458 in fees – payable in full, usually within two weeks.

The lender requirement of full payment, triggers a long-term trap for borrowers: 75 percent of all payday fees are stripped from borrowers stuck in more than 10 loans a year.

Similarly, 85 percent of car-title loan renewals occur within 30 days of a previous one, that could not be fully repaid. Additionally, one out of every five borrowers ends up losing their vehicle to repossession.

Today, 15 states and the District of Columbia have enacted interest rate caps on payday loans.
CRL research found that consumers in these states save $2.2 billion each year, that otherwise would have been paid for predatory fees.

In 2006, the Military Lending Act was approved with bipartisan support and authorized the Department of Defense to protect active duty members of the military, their spouses, and dependents with a 36 percent interest rate cap. In 2016, those regulations were expanded to include a wider range of credit products.

However, for those who aren’t active military and who live in the 35 states without meaningful payday car title loan regulation, the debt traps continue. A fair federal rule was previously promulgated and should be allowed to take effect.

The consumers whose lives will be either helped or hurt most by the eventual judicial ruling will be people of color.

There are reasons why civil rights organizations like the NAACP, Leadership Conference on Civil & Human Rights, UnidosUS, and the League of United Latin American Citizens all vigilantly oppose these small and predatory loans.

“Instead of letting Mulvaney feed consumers to loan sharks,” added Astrada, “the Trump Administration should appoint a permanent director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau with a commitment to protecting consumers.”

That kind of move would give renewed meaning to “government of, by, and for the people.” Stay tuned.

Charlene Crowell is the Center for Responsible Lending’s Communications Deputy Director. She can be reached at Charlene.crowell@responsiblelending.org.

Lauren Poteat is a multi-platform journalist, who currently serves as the Washington Correspondent for NNPA. Check out her bi-monthly podcast "Global Connect" focusing on everything Africa, on SoundCloud and YouTube. You can also follow Lauren on all social media accounts at LaurenMeredithP.

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