Breaking the Cycle of Debt: Why We Need the Payday Lending Rule

By Mike Litt, U.S. PIRG

Payday lending has long led to schemes that literally trap consumers in consecutive loans with obscenely high interest rates.

We call them debt traps for a reason.

These tricks marketed to financially vulnerable consumers are exactly why the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), under former Director Richard Cordray, created the Payday Lending Rule, which was finalized in October 2017.

But, in January 2018, the new acting director of the Consumer Bureau, Mick Mulvaney, announced that he is opening this rule up for reconsideration—to delay it, to change it or to roll it back.

No one should be tricked or trapped into entering cycles of unaffordable debt. This is as true today as it was in October when Cordray created the Payday Lending Rule.

Let’s break down why:

The average payday loan is $392, and typically must be repaid in one payment after two weeks.

To take out one of these loans, the borrower will typically provide evidence of a paycheck, and write a post-dated check or provide direct access to their bank account for electronic withdrawals. This check or direct access to a bank account is considered collateral, and ensures that the payday lender will be paid above all other expenses due that month.

However, many borrowers cannot afford both basic expenses and the cost of the entire loan. So they take out another loan. And another. And another.

And that’s how payday lenders make their money: 75 percent of the industry’s business comes from people who take out 10 or more loans.

With that many loans piled up, borrowers are actually paying more in fees than they received in credit.

According to the Consumer Bureau’s own research, more than four out of five payday loans are re-borrowed within a month, typically around the time that the loan is due.

And the fees? On average, the fees end up at the equivalent of 400 percent annual interest. This is just business as usual—with consumers trapped in cycles of debt.

One unaffordable loan turns into a debt trap from which it is difficult, if not impossible, to break free.

The Payday Lending Rule, finalized by the Consumer Bureau in October 2017, would require payday loan lenders to take steps to make sure that people can afford to repay their loans. Protections like the Payday Lending Rule are key to stopping debt traps.

Predatory loans don’t give consumers a fair choice. So we’ll say it again: No one should be tricked into entering cycles of unaffordable debt. That’s why we campaigned for the Payday Lending Rule in the first place, and we’ll continue defending this important consumer protection every step of the way…

But we can’t do it without you.

Tell Consumer Bureau Acting Director Mulvaney to protect consumers by keeping the Rule To Stop Payday Debt Traps intact.

Originally posted here.