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6.06.00
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6/06/00
6:00 p.m. By NR's Ramesh Ponnuru & John J. Miller |
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Still, some lawmakers think such fees are excessive. John LaFalce, Democratic congressman from New York, has talked about applying bank-usury laws to the industry. This would effectively destroy it. The laws in question generally cap annual interest rates at somewhere between 25 and 30 percent. Calculated at an annual rate, payday-advance fees are often over 400 percent. But that's an absurd calculation. As the industry points out, nobody calculates whether a cab fare is reasonable by comparing the per-mile cost to that of a cross-country plane trip. Cabs aren't for long-distance travel, and payday advances aren't for long-term loans. (It's also stupid to assume that the cost of processing a loan is proportional to its size.) Right now, LaFalce and other Democrats, egged on by Naderite "consumer" groups, are trying to kill the industry another way. They have introduced a bill to prohibit the companies from holding post-dated checks drawn on federally insured institutions (such as all the banks covered by the FDIC). LaFalce wants to attach this odious amendment to the banking bill winding its way through Congress.
Salmon Run The measure is modeled on California's Proposition 227, which voters approved two years ago even though it faced strong opposition from both Democrats and Republicans. In other bilingual-ed news, the Texas chapter of the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) is recommending that all students get the opportunity, dubious as it is, to receive bilingual instruction from K through 12.
Etc. We forgot to e-mail yesterday's Washington Bulletin. The topics: An attempt to protect babies who accidentally survive abortions, and Al Gore's artistic side. Click here. |
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