The Columbus Dispatch

Federal agency takes aim at ‘buy now, pay later’ plans

- Michelle Singletary

WASHINGTON – My grandmothe­r Big Mama used layaway to purchase our Christmas presents.

Big Mama hated using a credit card or being indebted to anyone, so she used layaway to buy gifts for the five grandchild­ren she was raising. Every payday, she would make a payment on the items held at the store until she could get everything off layaway. It was the one time of year she splurged.

The layaway strategy, which had been largely retired, is having a resurgence with modern-day features. The current “buy now, pay later” (BNPL) transactio­ns are done over apps rather than at a store’s customer service counter. And you get the product now, rather than having to wait to pay it off.

Want that party dress for a New Year’s Eve event? No problem. Wear it now, pay for it later. Except you might have some regrets when you realize you spent too much because you could spread the payments out.

The ease of the payment plans might be leading to more impulse purchases – not just during the holidays but all year and that is making the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau uneasy.

Stifled under the Trump administra­tion, the CFPB is resuming its dogged pursuit of companies offering credit products that could adversely affect consumers. The agency was created under the Obama presidency to increase the oversight of consumer financial products. Its top leadership moved away from that mission during President Donald Trump’s time in office, instead choosing to coddle financial companies and give in to their complaints of too much governance.

But the watchdog agency, now under President Joe Biden’s control, has signaled it’s not to be trifled with. To that end, the CFPB recently ordered five companies offering “buy now, pay later” credit to answer some questions about their business practices.

The CFPB has asked Affirm, Afterpay, Klarna, Paypal and Zip to collect informatio­n on the risks and benefits of the BNPL offerings. Among other issues, the CFPB is concerned about the level of debt consumers are racking up and what data is being collected.

Twenty percent of Americans said they had used a BNPL payment plan in the previous 12 months, according to a poll over the summer by Surveymonk­ey. More than half of those making less than $50,000 a year said that they are interested in using the service because they would not have been able to afford their purchases otherwise, the Surveymonk­ey poll found.

Despite the benefits of BNPL, 16% of consumers reported having buyer’s remorse – especially younger adults. Those who ended up regretting their purchase cited several reasons, including that they purchased things that were unnecessar­y or were too expensive, according to Surveymonk­ey.

Six U.S. senators, including Elizabeth Warren, D-mass., the architect of the CFPB, called for strengthen­ing oversight of BNPL products and providers.

“While the emergence of BNPL as affordable small-dollar credit has potentiall­y provided an alternativ­e to more costly forms of credit, these products also have the potential to cause consumer harm,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter to the CFPB this month.

A day later, the CFPB announced it was opening a probe.

The companies the CFPB is targeting all said they welcome the scrutiny.

In a 16-page order, the CFPB asked for a great deal of informatio­n, including the total number and amounts of BNPL transactio­ns, whether customers are automatica­lly enrolled in autopay arrangemen­ts that might lead to overdraft charges, how many defaults the companies are experienci­ng and what informatio­n is reported to the credit bureaus.

The CFPB said it will publish the results of its findings. Even if this examinatio­n doesn’t result in new regulation­s for the buy-now-pay-later industry, it should put all financial firms on notice: A more aggressive, responsive CFPB is back, baby, placing consumers’ interests first.

Readers can write to Michelle Singletary c/o The Washington Post, 1301 K St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071. Her email address is michelle.singletary@washpost.com.

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