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Credit card company tactics
Dear Dollar Diva,
Please comment on the practice of credit card "A" upping the interest
rate because you are late paying credit card "B" from another bank.
-- Don
It's legal and it sucks. But you've got to marvel
at the ingenuity of these credit card folks. How do they come up
with these pocket-picking schemes? And how do they get away with
it? The Diva urges you to contact your congressman
to protest this anti-consumer behavior.
Here are some other nasty practices that the Diva
would like to see halted:
- $29 fees. The cardholder
gets slapped with a $29 fee for paying his credit card bill a
day late, and if that pushes him over his credit limit, bang,
another $29 hits his account. That's $58, and he didn't buy a
damn thing.
- Surcharges for overseas
purchases. The Diva
is not complaining about the currency-exchange commission of about
1 percent; but why slap a surcharge of 2 percent to 5 percent
for charging a pair of Bruno Magli loafers in Rome instead of
Los Angeles? And why sock the cardholder with another 2 percent
to 5 percent if he returns them?
- 2 percent minimum payments.
Assume a cardholder has a $3,000 credit card balance, and his
APR is 20 percent. By making 2 percent minimum payments, he will
be married to the debt for almost 54 years. That giant gurgling
sound you hear is $13,000 in interest being flushed down the toilet.
Interested in knowing where you stand? Plug your numbers into
our calculator "The
true cost of paying the minimum," and be prepared for an unpleasant
surprise.
- Other fees and penalties.
How about being charged for not using your card enough, paying
off your balance or accepting an increase in your credit limit?
Oink, oink.
- Meaningless contracts.
The credit card company can change the terms of its agreement
any time it feels like it; all it has to do is give 15 days' notice
via a "bill-stuffer." So, a "fixed rate" is only "fixed" until
the credit card company changes it. Orwellian.
- Interest rates that
would make a don smack his lips.
In "Getting
pushed around by plastic," the Diva responds to a reader whose
APR was jacked up to 28 percent. With a single-digit prime rate,
someone might confuse interest like that with juice.
The best offense is a strong defense; pay off those
credit cards, and don't ever let yourself get sucked in by easy
credit again.
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-- Posted: Sept. 6, 2000