[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 80 (Monday, June 6, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3509-S3510]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INTERCHANGE FEES
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, later this week we are going to consider
an issue which is complicated, but it is an issue that affects every
single American who ever takes a piece of plastic and pays for anything
at a hotel, a restaurant, a convenience store, tuition at a school, or
a charitable deduction to the Red Cross in the midst of a disaster. If
you use plastic, every time that debit card--we are talking just about
debit cards for this conversation--every time that debit card is
swiped, there is a fee that goes to the bank that issued the card. One
may think to oneself, I wonder how they negotiate those fees. The
answer is, they don't. What happens is the credit card companies--the
two giants, Visa and MasterCard, working through the issuing banks--
determine what is going to be charged every time someone swipes the
card.
What does a local grocery store have to say about it? Nothing. Their
alternative is to not accept plastic at all. Visa and MasterCard say,
you want to use our card, you play by our rules and our rules will tell
you how much we take every time you swipe a card. I have seen it
happen, and my colleagues have too, where you go into a store and shake
your head because that young person in front of you just bought a candy
bar and is using a piece of plastic to pay for it and you think to
yourself, Why didn't they reach in their pocket and pull out a dollar
bill to pay for it. Instead, they swipe the card, and we know what
happens. That person selling the candy bar just lost money, because the
banks and the credit card companies are going to get that swipe fee
which happens to be more than the profit this little grocery store is
going to make on a candy bar.
Naturally, retailers across America have said, this isn't fair to us.
We have no negotiating power when it comes to how much is taken out
each time there is a plastic transaction for debit cards, and the
consumers don't know. We know as retailers, but the consumers don't
even know. There is no transparency. There is no competition. What is
wrong with this picture?
If we believe in a free market, we believe in those two things. We
ought to believe there would be some competition so maybe there would
be one debit card company that charges a lower fee. Maybe there would
be special consideration given if somebody paid in cash.
I guess this dates me, but there was a time when people paid in cash
for almost everything, except when they used a check, and that was
rare. And when they processed the check, it was pennies. Right now, the
Federal Reserve tells us that for each and every debit card
transaction, the average fee charged is 44 cents.
When we passed an amendment here last year, we said to the Federal
Reserve, What is the actual cost to the company, the issuing bank and
the credit card, debit card company, for processing this transaction?
They said, 10 cents or 12 cents, and they are charging over 40 cents on
each transaction. Who pays it? We all pay it. Even if you walk into a
store to pay cash, that merchant has put a price on a good that
considers the fact that most people are using plastic so they have to
raise the price to cover that fee. So we said to the Federal Reserve,
Sit down and figure out what is reasonable and proportional in terms of
the cost that should be collected every time someone swipes a card.
Well, this is a big political issue, one of the biggest. One might
say it is a multibillion-dollar issue, and it is. Because each month in
America, over $1.3 billion is collected from customers all across
America when they swipe their debit cards. Where does the money go?
Most of it goes to the biggest banks on Wall Street--the same banks
that were just moaning and groaning a few years ago about how they
needed a bailout because they made some big mistakes. They are back
again. They want a bailout when it comes to these debit cards. They
want to be able to continue to collect 40 cents and more on every
transaction.
We passed a law that said the party is over. Starting July 21, there
will be a new rule that will establish a reasonable fee, and they have
been fighting this with all of their might, all of their lobbyists, all
of their workers, all the letters they can send, against this reform.
Why? Because it involves huge amounts of money for these major Wall
Street banks and credit card companies.
We have to bring an end to this. Consumer groups across America,
labor groups, and small business groups--retail federations, merchants,
saloon keepers, hotel owners, restaurant owners, convenience store
owners--all across America have said we have to quit this. This isn't
fair to us and to our customers. Let us have a reasonable amount
charged for what is actually taking place with the debit card and we
can live with it, but not four times as much as they are charging
today. Incidentally, go up to Canada--not a lot different than the
United States. They have debit cards and credit cards there, issued by
banks. Do my colleagues know what the interchange fee is charged in
Canada today? Zero. No charge. No charge at all to the merchant who
takes a debit card to Canada. The same companies, Visa and MasterCard,
charge zero in Canada and 40 cents in the United States. Aren't we
blessed to have two great credit card companies who dreamed up how to
stick it to American consumers at the benefit of American banks on Wall
Street particularly? That is what this is about.
Most of my colleagues have gone home over the last week or two and
they have heard about this issue because it means a lot to a lot of
people. What we did was exempt in this law credit unions and community
banks. Some people say, Why did you exempt them? Why shouldn't they
have reduced fees too? Well, we want to make sure that financially they
are not disadvantaged by this, and we put in a specific exemption, sent
it to the Federal Reserve to write up their rules to protect them. I
have said on the floor and I will say it again, if at the end of the
day the rule from the Federal Reserve does not provide adequate
protection for credit unions and community banks, I am ready to sign up
today to put in even more protection in the law. I will be there. I
want to make sure they understand. They were exempted because I believe
they should be, and I want to make sure that exemption works.
But I don't care what happens to the Wall Street banks. I don't care
what happens to these credit card companies. They seem to end up on
their feet when it is all over anyway. After giving them billions of
dollars in taxpayers' money to bail them out of their mess that they
made of things in this recession, what did they do? They sent us a big
wet kiss in the form of multimillion-dollar bonuses for all of their
officers, smiling all the way to the bank with taxpayers' money. We
don't owe them a thing.
The Members who will come to the floor this week and vote with those
big banks and those credit card companies really have to ask
themselves: When are you ever going to stand up for consumers and
retailers and merchants and small businesses across America? Is
somebody going to speak up for them in this Chamber?
That is what this debate is about, and I hope at the end of the day
my colleagues will stand tall and say no to Wall Street, no to the
credit card companies; that they will stand by the retailers and
merchants, to give them a chance for transparency and competition, to
give them a chance for a reasonable--reasonable--fee for what is
actually transpiring in this transaction.
[[Page S3510]]
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
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