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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
October
Credit cards' insidious effects
may pose product liability issue
Mark Reutter, Business & Law Editor
217-333-0568; mreutter@uiuc.edu
10/26/06
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Are credit cards hazardous to your health and
safety under the principles of product liability?
Several features of credit cards make them different from traditional
forms of lending and encourage high levels of consumer debt by taking
advantage of “consumers’ cognitive and behavioral vulnerabilities,” Adam
J. Goldstein wrote in the latest issue of the University
of Illinois Law Review. Goldstein is a former editor at the review who now works
for a Chicago law firm.
When issuing loans for cars, home mortgages and other forms of debt,
banks conduct a thorough credit screening of applicants. But when the
same banks issue loans in the form of credit cards, “people with
bad credit histories, as well as those who have declared bankruptcy
or who have an income level that is too low to justify the credit lines
that they are given, all receive high-interest credit,” Goldstein
wrote.
Credit-card debt also differs from more standard credit arrangements
in the assessment of late fees and interest rates. This is largely
a result of the National Bank Act of 1864, which exempts national banks
from state consumer-protection laws that can limit the rate of interest
charged to a state resident, and regulate debt-collecting and credit-reporting
standards.
What’s more, according to Goldstein, the marketing techniques
and incentive programs used by credit-card companies induce consumers
to overspend and amass debt.
A 2002 medical paper described in the article links credit-card debt
to various health and social problems, including insomnia, anxiety,
marital breakdowns and depression.
Goldstein cited evidence that college students, inundated with direct-mail
appeals by card issuers, are especially vulnerable to credit-card debt.
This can lead to low grades, withdrawal from school and difficulty
in finding future employment because credit checks are becoming a common
feature of job applications.
The rapid increase in consumer indebtedness in the U.S. has been largely
confined to credit cards and has not characterized other types of consumer
credit.
“This indicates that there is something singular about
the design of credit cards that uniquely causes people to accumulate
too much debt,” Goldstein wrote.
A key principle of product liability is that the design of a product
is defective and that safer alternative designs are available. A unique
feature of credit cards is that “they allow debt to be incurred
bit by bit, in a series of charges, none of which exceed $20 or $30
each, that can amass quickly into thousands of dollars,” Goldstein
noted.
In addition, by grouping payments into a single transaction every month,
credit cards reduce a consumer’s sensitivity to price and promote
impulse buying, a fact that credit-card issuers encourage through tug-at-your-heart
commercials and other advertising.
“People tend to underestimate future borrowing and correspondingly overestimate
or be overly optimistic about their future ability to pay off whatever balances
they may accrue,” Goldstein wrote. “This causes people to be more
responsive to short-term factors, such as annual fees, and less sensitive to
the long-term elements of credit-card price.”
Visa is the largest credit-card company, with about 1 billion cards
in circulation. It is a private corporation owned by 21,000 banks,
each of which issues and markets its own Visa products. The second
largest issuer, MasterCard International, is an association of 22,000
member banks.
Goldstein is critical of low introductory interest rates offered to
new card owners that go up dramatically after six or 18 months. “It
is these high, long-term interest rates that result in faster debt
growth and accelerate negative social and individual consequences of
such debt,” he wrote.
Between 1993 and 2000, consumer credit lines tripled from $777 billion
to more than $3 trillion. The amount of credit-card debt held by Americans
has grown by an equal amount, with the average adult today using six
card accounts and the average household card debt conservatively estimated
at $12,000.
A case of products liability could be grounded in legal theories of
defective design, according to the article. One aspect of credit-card
design – the minimum monthly payment feature – accelerates
a consumer’s overall indebtedness and benefits banks through
the high interest assessed on the outstanding debt.
“Because the goal of products liability is to force manufacturers to
internalize the costs associated with product risks, it follows that credit-card
features that have minimum payment structures should be recognized as defects,” Goldstein
concluded.
His article is titled, “Why ‘It Pays’ to ‘Leave
Home Without It’: Examining the Legal Culpability of Credit
Card Issuers Under Tort Principles of Products Liability.”
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