Posts Tagged ‘S.500’

Lawmakers Want Cap on Pawn Shop Interest Rates

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

From NBC 4 Columbus Ohio:

COLUMBUS, Ohio—Federal legislation meant to cut the amount of interest someone can charge at pawn shops is upsetting pawn shop owners.

The Ohio Pawnbroker’s Association is campaigning to try to stop the bills.

The senate and house bills being proposed would cap the interest rate that pawn shop owners could charge on loans to about half of what they charge now. They would also eliminate storage charges of anything in hock.

Pawn shop interest rates have increased 60 percent over a year, but putting something in hock is meant to be a short-time loan with 85 percent of customers paying off their loan within a month.

Under the new plan, on a $100 loan, a pawn shop would only make about 30 cents if someone repaid it within a few days.

“When you come in to borrow money here you don’t have to fill out application fees. There’s no recourse to it. We can’t sue you to get our money back. It’s simple. It doesn’t take a lot of time. It’s a big, big industry. There’s over 200 pawn shops in Ohio alone,“ said Gary Chasin, of Uncle Sam’s Pawn Shop.

The Ohio Pawnbroker’s Association said only about 20 percent of Ohioans ever use a pawn shop and those that do are often the most vulnerable who need money fast.

Pawn Shops Today Blog

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

New Independent Consumer Protection Agency

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

How about new Federal Government agency for your protection? That’s right. Today the U.S. Senate Banking Chairman Christopher Dodd D-Conn, said he supports the creation of a new independent consumer protection agency that would regulate credit and banking products.

Senator Dodd stated: “If the financial crisis has proven one thing, it is that protecting the financial well-being of American consumers should be our first priority as we work to bring our financial regulatory structure into the 21st century. I am committed to making this agency the centerpiece of my efforts and I will work with President Obama and my colleagues to rebuild our financial architecture from the bottom up.”

Okay, this sounds like a worthwhile effort, but wait. This week Senator Dodd also chose to become a cosponsor of Senator Durbin’s S.500 bill, another plan designed to protect US consumers. But should S.500 be passed in its current form, the pawnbroking industry in the US would quickly shutter its doors and pawn shops would no longer be a short-term credit provider in this country.

Is this really rebuilding our financial architecture? If so, in just my own personal pawn database, I hold the information for 23,000 pawnshop customers who have come to me for vital short-term consumer credit. I’m sure that at least some of my pawn shop loan customers may be interested in holding a position on the new independent consumer protection agency. This way, all US consumers would be protected.

Democrats Declare War on the Poor

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Couldn’t have said it better myself. From The American Spectator:

Given the abject failure of the War on Poverty — as Ronald Reagan said, “Poverty won” — now Democrats apparently have decided to go right for the heart of the problem, by making war on the poor.

That’s the only plausible explanation for S.500, the “Protecting Consumers from Unreasonable Credit Rates Act of 2009,” introduced earlier this year by Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Illinois). The bill would limit interest rates in such a way that pawn shop owners say it would drive them out of business. Currently under consideration by the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs committee, this legislation could only make sense to someone who (a) knows nothing about pawn shops, and (b) knows nothing about economics.

Having once been a penurious college student and struggling rock musician, I had a lot of dealings with pawn shops back in the day, and respect the straightforward nature of their business. You have an amp or a guitar and need money, you hock it until you can afford to get it back. And if you don’t redeem it, the pawn shop keeps it and sells it (thereby providing a source of cheap second-hand guitars and amps for other struggling musicians).

The pawn shop business is very easy to understand, and if the interest rate seems exorbitant to middle-class folks and liberal do-gooders, maybe it’s because they don’t understand how grateful pawn shop customers are for the service. Who else offers on-the-spot credit to those who might otherwise have no source of quick cash?

It is idiotic that, on the one hand, Democrats demanded that taxpayers bail out the mortgage industry, while on the other hand they are trying to put pawn shops out of business. Given President Obama’s promise to “save or create” hundreds of thousands of new jobs over the next 100 days, do Democrats really want to destroy an entire industry, one that provides emergency financial services to so many of the poor people whom the Democratic Party claims to represent?

Here’s hoping S.500 dies quietly in committee. Otherwise, once the Chinese get tired of buying U.S. debt, the federal government could have no place else to turn.

 

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Pawnonomics by Stephen Krupnik tells the infamous history of the pawn broking industry and shines a bright light into
its darkest corners, while also pointing out some pinnacles along the way.