The United States credit card industry rakes in $2.5 billion a month in profits
– largely
in fees and interest charged to the American consumer. But its thirst
for additional profits is insatiable. Credit card corporations areshowering Congress with cash
in an attempt to squeeze every last dime out of those who can afford it
least to by making it harder for them to get out of debt.Meanwhile the
bill does nothing to stop "abusive lending practices by credit card
companies."
The bankruptcy bill
is an attempt to prevent people from filing Chapter 7 bankruptcy –
which gives people a clean slate – and make them file under Chapter 13,
which requires continued payments to the credit card companies.
Already, judges can deny Chapter 7 protection if they think the law is being abused. The bankruptcy bill would require consumers to complete a complex array of forms to "prove" they qualify for Chapter 7. But according to the American Bankruptcy Institute, a nonpartisan research organization, just "3 percent
of people who file under Chapter 7 could continue to pay under a
court-supervised plan if they filed under Chapter 13." So the real
impact of the bill would not be to prevent abuse of the system but to "make filing for bankruptcy much more costly" for those who genuinely need it.
The overwhelming
majority of Americans do not become bankrupt by purchasing Rolex
watches and plasma TVs. The leading cause: getting sick. A Harvard
University study found that half of all respondents "said that illness or medical bills drove them to bankruptcy."
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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