Capping Credit Card Interest Rates
In a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing this week, Missouri U.S. Senator Josh Hawley questioned executives from Visa and Mastercard about their credit card companies’ record profit margins (which he said) made at the expense of American card owners and small businesses. Addressing Linda Kirkpatrick, President of Mastercard for the Americas, and Bill Sheedy, Senior Advisor to Visa Inc.’s CEO, Senator Hawley noted the credit card debt crisis that’s crushing Americans: “You’ve got debt like we’ve never seen before in American history.”
“[Visa and Mastercard’s] profit margins are as high or higher than they’ve ever been. You have 80 percent of the relevant market in the credit card interchange fees that we’re talking about, and, yet, you couldn’t survive if there’s any competition?” Senator Hawley prodded. “This is just classic, collusive monopoly behavior.” Senator Hawley went on to make the case for capping credit card interest rates, a move he has already introduced legislation for. “This has to change,” Senator Hawley insisted. “I thought one of the best proposals that the President-elect, President-elect Trump, made during his last campaign was to cap the interest rates of credit cards.” Just last week, Senator Hawley released a statement, urging his colleagues to make capping credit card interest rates a top priority of the next Congress. Senator Hawley previously introduced the Capping Credit Card Interest Rates Act, a bill that would cap credit card interest rates at 18 percent to bring relief to working people across America.