The Campus Credit Card Trap
Executive Summary
Credit card lending is enormously profitable. According to annual
Federal Reserve Board of Governors’ (FRB) Reports to Congress, it is
the most profitable form of banking. But the credit card industry is
saturated. The average adult had nearly five credit cards in 2006 and
the average household received 5.7 credit card solicitations monthly in
2004, according to the 2007 FRB report.1 Banks seeking even greater profits from credit cards have several options:
-First,
as has been widely reported and is the subject of Congressional
inquiries, banks can squeeze their existing customers for greater
profits in several ways: including (1) using a variety of rewards and
tricks such as encouraging extremely low minimum payments to maintain
highly-profitable high revolving card balances; (2) raising interest
rates on those balances through a variety of traps including imposition
of penalty interest rates for late payments and changing due dates to
encourage more of those late payments; (3) using misleading teaser
rates and, (4) raising the rates of otherwise good customers by
claiming that their credit score had declined or that they were late to
another lender (called “universal default”);2
-Second,
banks can market to customers of other credit card companies, urging
them to switch by offering low teaser rates on balance transfers and
other incentives. But this marketing is expensive both because of the
cost of the zero-interest offers and the cost of sending out the
billions of solicitations;
-Finally, banks can seek out customers
who have never had a card. College students are among the most
prominent targets for this marketing.3 They are young and
understand that they need credit to get ahead in the world. Some need
credit because of the rising cost of a college education. Finally, most
of them are clumped together on campuses that they either commute to or
live at. This makes them easy to target. Companies use a variety of
techniques, from buying lists from schools and entering into exclusive
marketing arrangements with schools to marketing directly to students
through the mail, over the phone, on bulletin boards and through
aggressive on-campus and “near-campus” tabling-- facilitated by “free
gifts.”
This study is an in-person survey of a diverse sample of
over 1500 students, primarily single undergraduates, at 40 large and
small schools and universities in 14 states around the country
conducted between October 2007 and February 2008. It analyzes how
students pay for their education, how many use and how they use their
credit cards and, finally, their attitudes toward credit card marketing
on campus and whether or not they support principles to rein in credit
card marketing on campus.
The findings confirm that students are
using credit cards in significant numbers and that a significant number
are paying the price through late fees, high balances and
delinquencies. The findings also show that banks are marketing
aggressively to students through a variety of channels. Finally, the
findings demonstrate that an overwhelmingly majority of students
support limits on credit card marketing on campus to rein in unfair
bank practices.
Get more resources, including contracts between banks and universities,
here: http://www.truthaboutcredit.org/campus-credit-card-trap/resources
Read a 2-page summary of the survey's major findings here.
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Download the full report.
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