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Analyzed from 491 words in the discussion.

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#credit#card#interest#interchange#fees#access#debt#money#customers#rewards

Discussion (12 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

lyallβ€’about 2 hours ago
You hear this argument pretty often, but it's not true.

Credit card companies do make a lot of money off of interest. But they also make a lot of money off of interchange fees.

Businesses want wealthy customers because they spend more money, so they're willing to pay a higher interchange fee to access those customers. Higher interchange fees mean card companies can offer better rewards, which in turn attract more wealthy customers to their cards.

So even if credit card debt was not a thing, it would still be incredibly profitable for card companies to sell access to their rich cardholder clientele, and to in turn provide rewards to those cardholders.

pilotnekoβ€’about 1 hour ago
Businesses raise prices to cover the interchange fee, which impacts lower income consumers disproportionately.
B1FF_PSUVMβ€’about 1 hour ago
> make a lot of money off of interest

Looking at the debt numbers (something like 150 billion over 90 days delinquent) that may not even be the case, if you cover unpaid defaults with interest paid.

The mentioned idea of capping interest at 10% would probably mean credit cards not being issued to a large swath of the population.

variety8675β€’about 2 hours ago
Pay in full customers can be profitable through interchange fees alone, so I don't really follow how it is a wealth transfer
theandrewbaileyβ€’35 minutes ago
Merchants almost never pass along interchange fees to the customer. Instead, it's built into the prices that every customer pays the merchant, regardless if the customer uses a credit card, which means everyone pays for credit card rewards.
SpicyLemonZestβ€’about 2 hours ago
I don't disagree with anything the author is saying. But the corollary, which the article doesn't really acknowledge, is that reforms like credit card interest caps and the Credit Card Competition Act would substantially limit consumer access to credit. That's the argument that banks raise every time and why interest rate caps always die in committee.

If advocates want to team up with Dave Ramsay and say "that's right, credit cards are bad, we want them to be less available", perhaps things could change one day. I'd donate to that cause. If we keep pretending that we could have exactly the same system with lower interest rates, I don't think we'll ever get anywhere.

willio58β€’about 1 hour ago
> But the corollary, which the article doesn't really acknowledge, is that reforms like credit card interest caps and the Credit Card Competition Act would substantially limit consumer access to credit.

That's a good point, and of course there are downstream affects of this, but I wonder if that's a bad thing. We're not talking about reduction in ability to access say mortgage debt or something of that nature, we're talking credit card debt. Making it possible for a person to be in $10k, $20k, $40k+ in extremely high interest credit card debt doesn't seem like a positive for our economy overall to me. It really just masks the root of the problem, which is that people are working paycheck to paycheck and can't afford the occasional emergency.

s1artibartfastβ€’about 1 hour ago
I increasingly think people should have the option to define if they should be treated as an adult or not, kinda like an organ donor on their license.

Those who opt out would be protected from their own choices.

pixl97β€’about 2 hours ago
Sam Vimes "Boots" Theory of Socioeconomic Unfairnes, in article form.
applfanboysbgonβ€’about 2 hours ago
It is jarring to read Claude talking like it uses credit cards or feels guilt over using reward points.
willio58β€’about 1 hour ago
Author here! I promise I didn't use Claude for any of this. I will admit I'm working on developing a "voice" in my writing, so maybe that's what you're sensing. Thanks for the read anyway.
B1FF_PSUVMβ€’about 2 hours ago
Bullshit guilt-tripping logic. Just the 150 billion from "interchange" (merchant fees) would be enough reason to fund the 15 billion (estimated) rewards.

What next, supermarket coupons as a wealth transfer mechanism?