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Valentine’s Day – Why Your Credit-Card Company Loves It

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Written by aaa   
Thursday, 13 February 2014 03:41
Source: MErchants Payments Coalition
http://www.unfaircreditcardfees.com/site/press/valentines_day_why_your_credit-card_company_loves_it

Americans will spend an estimated $17 billion this year on Valentine’s Day. The banks and credit-card companies will be doing lots of celebrating, too.

That’s because for every box of chocolates, bouquet of flowers or candle-lit dinner you buy, the bank that issued your credit card will charge florists, chocolate shops and restaurants a “swipe fee” of between 2 and 4 percent of the price to handle the transaction. Yet the banks can do these transactions profitably for mere pennies.

Consider the average consumer, who – the National Retail Federation estimates – will spend $130 for Valentine’s Day. At 2 percent, that’s $2.60 in charges on goods and services that cost a mere fraction of that amount. At 4 percent, it’s more than $5.

Spread just a 2-percent charge across $17 billion and it adds up to real money – $340 million, or a third of a billion dollars. And that’s only one relatively minor holiday.

Banks can charge these rates because the two biggest credit-card companies, MasterCard and Visa, are a powerful duopoly. They each set rates in secret that their banks charge and dictate unfair terms to merchants, who must accept their credit cards to stay in business.

That means unfairly high costs for merchants (and retailing is a huge industry whose health is critical to the economy) and, ultimately, higher prices for consumers.

Because of the dysfunctional credit card market that Visa and MasterCard have created, swipe fees are as much as eight times more on every transaction in the U.S. than Europe. American families pay an estimated average of more than $400 a year in swipe fees.

In a fair, transparent system that would look more like the rest of our market-oriented economy, banks would set their rates openly and compete against each other.

But they don’t, and consumers pay for it on Valentine’s Day and every day of the year.

Learn more about unfair credit-card swipe fees. For more information, go to the Merchants Payments Coalition website: http://www.unfaircreditcardfees.com/

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