The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Overdraft usage a safety net for millions of Americans

- Ross Marchand Courtesy of insidesour­ces.com

Too often, well-intentione­d legislatio­n backfires and hurts the people it intends to help. The case of overdraft fees provides a timely case-in-point, as Sens. Corey Booker of New Jersey and Sherrod Brown of Ohio continue their crusade to ban charges (overdraft fees) on negative balances by banks.

Their proposed Stop Overdraft Profiteeri­ng Act of 2018 would ban overdraft fees on ATMs and one-time debit transactio­ns completely and strictly limit fees on checks and recurring payments to six times per year. To the senators, sharply curtailing overdraft fees shifts the pendulum of power from large banks to ordinary consumers hit by “surprise” charges.

A closer look at the issue, though, reveals that millions of struggling consumers rely on overdraft protection to borrow money at low rates. Before pressing their peers for support, Booker and

Brown ought to consider their bill’s unintended consequenc­e on America’s most desperate borrowers.

To some, triggering overdraft protection is a minor mistake realized days after buying a coffee or a sandwich. And, compared to the cost of a single food item, an overdraft charge seems exorbitant. Most banks have flat, fixed overdraft fees, which average $35 according to Pew Charitable Trusts. But because the fee doesn’t increase even as the amount debited increases, overdraft protection lets consumers “borrow” large amounts of money over a short period of time for a very low price.

Consider that, for paying rents, mortgages or large hospital bills, using a credit card typically requires paying a 2.5 percent to 3 percent transactio­n fee. Thus, for any upfront expense of $1,500 or greater, short-term borrowing via overdraft protection is actually cheaper than paying with a credit card. Consumers borrowing with overdraft protection needn’t worry about credit scores, which only become an issue if the overdraft charges go to collection­s.

But for desperate consumers comparing options, credit cards are often off the table. According to a 2017 analysis by Pew, a majority of consumers using overdraft protection didn’t have access to a credit card. Overdraft use, then, is an underrated lifeline for poorer Americans looking to pay large expenses in between paychecks.

That’s not to say, though, that overdraft opponents are completely misguided. According to Pew, nearly 70 percent of overdraft consumers would rather have had a declined transactio­n than an accepted one with a $35 fee. Around half of overdrafte­rs don’t recall opting in to the service, underscori­ng the need for more transparen­cy from banks and credit unions.

Despite these figures, many surveyed overdraft consumers believe that the service is useful to individual­s in dire straits. More than 40 percent of overdrafte­rs believed that the system mainly helps individual­s similar to themselves, as opposed to exploiting them.

The sensible solution, then, is greater transparen­cy via more informatio­n supplied to consumers. This is already starting to take place, with the advent of easy-to-access informatio­n on which banks have the best and worst overdraft practices.

Consumers can easily find banks with no overdraft programs at all, or institutio­ns with transparen­t overdraft practices.

Proposed legislatio­n banning the practice wholesale would disadvanta­ge millions of Americans using overdraft protection as a safety net against skyhigh bills. Surely lawmakers can push for more transparen­cy without ending options for these vulnerable consumers.

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