Letters: Sees Flaws With Payday Lending Restrictions

The Hudson Hub Times
March 18, 2009

by: Tim Miller

Legislators judging two-week payday loans by an annual percentage rate standard is as senseless as comparing a hotel's nightly rate to a 12-month apartment lease ("Legislators unhappy with payday lending rates," Hudson Hub-Times, March 15). Is a hotel a "predatory hotel" because it charges $154 per night? That's $4,620 per month, or $56,210 per year! You can rent an apartment in Cleveland for about $500 per month. So, using the same price cap proposed for short-term loans, the $154 room rate should be set at a maximum of $16 per night.

A $16 price limit wouldn't be a ban, but it's hard to imagine many hotels staying in business with that kind of restriction. Short-term payday loans are no different: the suggested 36 percent APR limit translates to a $1.38 fee for a two week loan of $100 dollars. The limit effectively shuts down the short term loan service business. But that does not solve the borrower's problem of needing a loan. It does however leave them with the traditional more expensive alternatives, including paying fees for bounced checks.

Tim Miller
Center for Consumer Freedom
Washington, D.C.

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