Banks have been blaming the Durbin Amendment for everything wrong with the world, but as Doug Kantor, counsel to the Merchants Payments Coalition, wrote in a Huffington Post blog, debit reform has brought greater competition among banks to the marketplace.
“The truth is, checking fees are set by competitive market dynamics, while swipe fees on debit cards haven't been. The fees were decided by Visa and MasterCard and every bank that belonged to one or the other charged the same thing - that looks just like price-fixing in every other part of the economy. The fact that swipe fees tripled over the past decade didn't prevent banks from increasing checking fees at the same time. Fluctuations in checking fees and other banking fees since debit reform are fundamentally the same as what was happening in the consumer banking market before the reforms were enacted with checking fees going up at the same or a lesser rate.”
In other words, debit reform forced big banks to compete for customers. The rest of Kantor's article can be found here.
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