Los Angeles Times

Payday lenders get yet another free pass

- DAVID LAZARUS

Something very important, affecting millions of consumers, won’t happen Monday.

That’s when new protection­s from abusive payday and car-title lenders were set to take effect, requiring the firms to make sure borrowers can pay back their obligation­s in a reasonable amount of time and don’t become mired in debt.

However, the Trump administra­tion is delaying this perfectly reasonable safeguard for another 15 months, and already has declared its intention to do away with the rules entirely amid concern they’re too troublesom­e for lenders.

This is the latest example of Trump underminin­g or eliminatin­g consumerfr­iendly policies initiated by his predecesso­r, former President Obama, for no better reason than because industry players demanded a lighter touch.

“Despite years of evidence about the harms of payday and car-title loans, the new leadership at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has decided to favor the lenders,” said Lauren Saunders, associate director of the National Consumer Law Center.

“They don’t care that these loans result in people getting caught in debt traps that can last for months and months,” she told me.

The CFPB passed the new rules in 2017 and gave the $50-billion short-term loan industry nearly two years to prepare for the changes.

“Too often, borrowers who need quick cash end up trapped in loans they can’t afford,” former bureau Director Richard Cordray, an Obama appointee, said at the time. “The rules’ common sense ability-torepay protection­s prevent lenders from succeeding by setting up borrowers to fail.”

Let’s say you borrow $400. You’d be obligated to repay the loan within two

weeks, plus $60 in interest and fees — the equivalent of an annual percentage rate of more than 300%.

If the loan can’t be repaid — and all too often it can’t for people living paycheck to paycheck — your obligation would get rolled over into a new loan, resulting in an ongoing burden of highintere­st debt.

In a 2014 report, the CFPB found that over 80% of payday loans ended up being rolled over into new loans or followed within days by a new loan. Half of all payday loans resulted in 10 additional loans to pay off the original debt.

Car-title loans can be even more troublesom­e, especially in a place like Southern California, where your economic livelihood often depends on having access to wheels.

Like payday loans, they’re a way to get fast cash when needed. Unlike payday loans, you’re putting up your vehicle as collateral. Not only do title loans come with exorbitant interest rates, but if you fall behind on payments, you can lose your car.

Rebecca Borné, senior policy counsel with the Center for Responsibl­e Lending, said about 20% of car-title loan recipients end up having their vehicles taken and sold off by lenders.

“It’s just shocking,” she said. “These loans have a truly crushing impact on so many families.”

Things were supposed to improve as of this coming Monday.

Under the new rules, lenders would have to conduct a “full-payment test” — meaning they’d have to determine up front that a borrower has the financial means to repay the loan without taking out another loan.

Moreover, if a borrower takes out three payday loans in “quick succession,” lenders would have to cut them off for 30 days. Lenders also would be prohibited from placing borrowers in debt for more than 90 days in any 12-month period.

“Requiring affordable loans that a borrower can pay back without taking out another loan would have protected millions of people who are typically caught by lenders in high-cost debt traps,” said Christine Hines, legislativ­e director for the National Assn. of Consumer Advocates.

“The new CFPB leadership does not want to give the rules a chance to work,” she said.

The short-term loan industry went into Chicken Little mode as soon as the new rules were announced a few years ago, arguing that the requiremen­ts would put thousands of lenders out of business.

That means, of course, the industry was acknowledg­ing its business model depends on ensnaring consumers in endless debt. In a normal world, that would be sufficient justificat­ion to proceed with the new protection­s.

But we are not in a normal world. To President Trump, the industry’s complaints were a sure sign of government overreach.

His newly businessfr­iendly CFPB announced this year that requiring short-term lenders to perform due diligence on borrowers “would impose substantia­l burdens on industry” and make it harder for people to access credit.

To be sure, it’s important that people have access to emergency funds in a pinch. Banks, credit unions, government agencies — each can play a role in addressing such needs.

Payday and car-title loans are not that financial safety net. They’re black holes that can pull in the desperate or unwary, then bleed them of all available resources.

The Community Financial Services Assn. of America, a trade group representi­ng short-term lenders, told me in a statement that it’s pleased to see a halt to the CFPB’s “flawed” and “misguided” regulation.

“The bureau’s rule ... was crafted on a pre-determined, partisan agenda,” it said, adding that the CFPB “failed to demonstrat­e consumer harm from smalldolla­r loans, ignored unbiased research and data, and relied on flawed informatio­n to support its rulemaking.”

Which is true, if you disregard those pesky facts about people being stuck for months or even years paying back a loan, or losing their car because the interest rates were so high.

Several years ago, Congress had to pass a law capping interest rates on loans charged to members of the military. It makes you wonder why civilians should be treated differentl­y.

It also makes you wonder why short-term lenders currently enjoy so much influence in Washington.

In 2016, the year Trump was elected president, payday lenders contribute­d $2.8 million to political causes, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Of that total, 81% went to Republican­s.

In the 2018 election cycle, payday lenders contribute­d $2.5 million. Eighty-nine percent went to Republican­s.

Last year, the payday lending industry for the first time held its annual convention at the Trump National Doral Miami resort.

Payday lenders returned to the Trump-owned hotel for this year’s event.

There was much to celebrate.

David Lazarus’ column runs Tuesdays and Fridays. He also can be seen daily on KTLA-TV Channel 5 and followed on Twitter @davidlaz. Send your tips or feedback to david.lazarus @latimes.com.

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 ?? The Washington Post/Getty Images ?? CAR-TITLE LOANS can be especially troublesom­e in a place like Southern California, where your economic livelihood often depends on having access to wheels. If you fall behind on payments, you can lose your car.
The Washington Post/Getty Images CAR-TITLE LOANS can be especially troublesom­e in a place like Southern California, where your economic livelihood often depends on having access to wheels. If you fall behind on payments, you can lose your car.

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