Posts Tagged ‘Consumer Federal Protection Agency’
Monday, June 14th, 2010
Well written and painstakingly researched, the author does a wonderful job of exposing blatant corruption recently in some parts of the subprime lending industry. Rivlin does a masterful job at documenting events, people, and companies whose actions in part led to the current credit crisis and housing bust. A must read for any American wanting to know what really happened to their 401(k).
The author does show an unfortunate but understandable bias against any and all forms of short-term consumer credit offered to those who may be exempt from more mainstream transactions. This broad brush approach of condemning everyone offering credit to less fortunate Americans does a disservice to much-needed industries in the US. A vast majority of otherwise un-creditworthy consumers benefit greatly by some of these financial products.
I say this because I was a pawnbroker for 30 years and I now consult and offer business coaching within the pawn shop industry. My original reason for purchasing the book is because the pawnbroking industry is offered in the sub title of the book along with a very unattractive picture of a pawn shop, hopefully carefully chosen by the publisher and not the author, adorning the front of the book.
Funny thing is, the pawnbroking industry is barely even mentioned in the author’s book. It is possible Rivlin may have discovered in his research that pawn shop loans are a very worthy 3000-year-old form of credit that causes no one any harm and does not necessarily create debt. Maybe the author found out that pawnbroking transactions are not just about the working poor. Or maybe the choice of cover and subtitle were just a more iconic match to the title of the book rather than a picture of Wall Street financiers.
Tags: Broke USA, consumer credit, Consumer Federal Protection Agency, Credit Crunch, economic crisis, Gary Rivlin, Pawn Loans, pawnbroker, pawnshop, Payday Loans Posted in Pawn Ecomomics | 2 Comments »
Saturday, August 8th, 2009
From a Blog Entry on Pawn Shops Today
FULL TEXT HERE
The World Bank recognized in it’s report, “Key Principles of Microfinance”, that it costs much more to make small loans unless Microfinance Lenders can charge interest rate and fees that are
well above banks. “When governments regulate interest rates they usually set them at levels too low to permit sustainable Microfinance loans” (7) Senate Bill 500/HR 1608, as written, will in effect close the doors on 13,500 pawn/ retail businesses – that means another loss of 100,000
good paying jobs gone forever. The worst effect, it will close the only door 56,000,000 Americans will ever have to make small loans.
Under Senate Bill 500, Section 141.(2) tolerances should define pawn shop owners as micro finance lenders and allow for storage expense of pawned items. Every American has in some way benefited from pawn brokers, whether it was when Queen Isabella of Spain was turned down by her treasury to finance Christopher Columbus’ voyage to the new world and had to pawn her royal jewelry (8) or when we made a $300.00 loan to keep a small lawn service business in operation and off the rolls of the unemployed. Many Americans have never known the need for a $20.00 loan to buy a tank of gas or put food on the table so you can make it to the next payday. We have always had an important role in our country’s micro finance. Pawn brokers as a whole recognize the need for financial reforms, however as the Bill is written it will close down the good along with the greedy.
Robert G. Whitten, II
Chairman of the Board
Tags: Consumer Federal Protection Agency, Federal APR Rate Cap, Pawn Loans, Pawn Shops Today, pawnbroker, pawnshop, S.500, Senator Durbin Posted in Pawnbroker Rants | 1 Comment »
Saturday, June 20th, 2009
Again this week the US President was pushing hard for a new agency that would oversee credit products and require companies to plainly states the terms of financial products, while banning “the most unfair practices” in consumer credit. “We’re going to level the playing field for consumers,” he said. To me, this spells trouble for every source of short-term consumer credit. Why? Because the playing field will never be level. It cannot be. Consumer credit needs are not level. Can we paint the same face on a consumer credit product to finance an automobile as we can for a short-term consumer credit product to provide gasoline for the vehicle? Of course not. But this is exactly what they are attempting to do with all credit falling under the same rules. It will not work.
If President Obama really wants to form The Consumer Financial Protection Agency to oversee credit in the US, the real question is not what the agency will do, but who will do it. If this proposed agency consists of nothing more than bloviating bureaucrats with their pie-in-the-sky Pollyanna view of reality, consumers seeking short-term credit will be forced to unregulated sources or worse. Consumers of short-term credit in the US would benefit greatly by having a pawnbroker on the board of The Consumer Financial Protection Agency being proposed. At least someone would be looking out for the needs of the millions of customers currently relying on short-term credit.
Tags: consumer credit, Consumer Federal Protection Agency, Pawn Loans, pawnbroker, pawnshop Posted in Pawnbroker Rants | 2 Comments »
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