Call & Times

It’s open season on Americans’ wallets

- By HELAINE OLEN Special to The Washington Post Helaine Olen is a contributo­r to the Plum Line blog and the author of “Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry.”

Remember last year’s viral outrage over a video of a doctor getting forcibly removed from a United Airlines flight when he refused to leave the plane after getting bumped because the plane was oversold?

That’s so 2017.

Late last week Reuters broke the news that the Trump administra­tion was opposing a provision in a Senate bill reauthoriz­ing the Federal Aviation Administra­tion funding that would upgrade consumer rights when it comes to airline flights, and ban bumping after passengers are checked in or seated on the plane. The idea behind the bill was that it’s wrong to seat a customer only to tell them at the last minute they aren’t going to their destinatio­n at that time because the airline sold tickets to more people than the plane could hold.

At the same time, the Trump administra­tion also opposes a change that would permit government review of airline fees on everything from baggage to cancellati­ons and ticket changes to see if they are “disproport­ionate to the costs incurred by the air carrier.” That provision might make it harder for airlines to hit their customers with, say, ticket change fees that equal or exceed the actual cost of the fare.

This is just the latest evidence that the Trump administra­tion is enabling a turbo-charged predatory economy. Despite the fact he campaigned on a promise to drain the swamp, Trump appointees are distinguis­hing themselves by prioritizi­ng big business over our personal finances at almost every opportunit­y.

Over at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, temporary head Mick Mulvaney, who famously described the agency he now heads as a “sick, sad” joke, has presided over a neutering of the agency, closing down investigat­ions of payday loan lenders, and supporting legislatio­n signed by Trump that overturned regulation­s meant to protect Afri- can Americans and Latinos from paying higher rates for auto loans than white consumers.

At the Department of Education, Betsy DeVos has downsized a unit investigat­ing fraud at for-profit colleges. As for an attempt to cut back on loan forgivenes­s to students who attended for-profit Corinthian Colleges, which closed down amidst a flood of controvers­y over lies about graduation and job placement rates, a California court stepped in Friday night and stopped the department from doing it – at least for now.

According to Devin Fergus, the author of the soon-to-be-published book “Land of the Fee: Hidden Costs and the Decline of the American Middle Class,” these sorts of fees ultimately exacerbate inequality. He calculated that charges related to subprime mortgages, payday and student loans and auto insurance premiums – money disproport­ionately paid by lower income communitie­s and by Africans Americans and Latinos – alone cost Americans almost $1.5 trillion annually. That money flows upward to the large corporatio­ns, extracting the sums and away from most of us.

As for the airline fees, they add up too. According to regulators, American airlines monies earned from baggage and reservatio­n change fees alone added up to $7.5 billion in 2017, an increase of more than 30 percent from 2010. As Florida Sen. Bill Nelson, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Transporta­tion Committee, told Reuters, the Department of Transporta­tion’s opinion on the Senate attempt to crack down on airline fees and other predatory practices “reads more like something written by the airlines instead of the government watchdog that’s supposed to be protecting consumers.”

This hands-off approach by government, in turn, seems to tell businesses that petty – and not so petty – pocket-picking is A-okay. Heath insurers like Anthem claim the right to decide your medical emergency was such an immediate need that they need to pay it – after you’ve re- ceived the service, which is likely to cost thousands of dollars. Financial institutio­ns like Bank of America decide to pay their Merrill Lynch brokers not just based on selling investment­s, but on how successful they are at cross-selling the bank’s credit cards, mortgages and checking and savings accounts to their customers – seemingly without taking into account whether those services are needed. Go to seek advice on your retirement accounts, stay for the pitch for bank products!

Then there is the bait and switch tax reform, which the Trump administra­tion and Republican­s said would result in pay raises and job gains. As it turns out, American corporatio­ns missed the memo. Last week, Axios revealed at a conference sponsored by the Dallas Federal Reserve, high ranking c-suite executives said they would do no such thing. Instead, the money is going to share buybacks and stock dividends. In other words, the rich are likely to get richer, not just from the disproport­ionately large tax cut they received, but because the tax cut is also enriching the companies they are invested in, giving both their income and wealth a boost – and this was sold as a boon to middle class Americans, even as it will fleece them, via deficits and tax hikes later, over time.

The economy of the Trump era is leaning into degrading both the quality of American life and our pocketbook­s. It’s not just that the Trump administra­tion misleads about the impact of its policies (such as those discussed above) on the bottom line of most voters. It’s not just that the federal government is doing away with regulation­s and laws that benefit ordinary Americans. It’s that the government is saying this sort of behavior is more than permissibl­e – it is what we should expect. If you get ripped off, it’s on you.

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