Friday, December 28, 2012

Small Banks Benefitted, Not Harmed, By Durbin Amendment

Visa and MasterCard Under FTC Probe

In a recent report, the Federal Trade Commission has taken a close look into debit card transactions and found that small banks have not been hurt by the Durbin Amendment that lowered swipe fees charged by card companies and banks with assets above $10 billion. The report also announced that the FTC is investigating Visa and MasterCard for practices that might have prevented merchants from using lower cost processors of debit card transactions -- in violation of the Durbin Amendment.

From the report:
“…(I)nterchange fees paid to exempt issuers are higher than those paid to non-exempt issuers. A recent report by the General Accountability Office also concluded that ‘community banks and credit unions have not, on average, experienced a significant decline in their debit interchange fees…. This is consistent with early reports that the payment card networks had adopted a two-tier fee structure for exempt and non-exempt issuers.”
Doug Kantor, counsel to the Merchants Payments Coalition said:
“The FTC report confirms what merchants have been saying all along, that after the reforms small banks and credit union would not only not be harmed by debit but also would benefit from reform, along with consumers, merchants and the overall economy,”
For more information read Merchants Payments Coalition press release here and FTC report here.

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