In a recent report, the Federal Reserve found that it costs banks and credit card companies about 5 cents to process a debit card transaction. With all of our technological advances, that amount sounds reasonable, and debit card reform, as legislated in the Durbin Amendment, said banks should charge a "reasonable" fee for swiping their cards. Only problem is they don't charge 5 cents. They charge 24 cents, and the Fed is doing nothing about it.
It is a 500% markup! Unthinkable in any other marketplace.
The Durbin Amendment required the Federal Reserve to limit swipe-fees on debit cards that banks charge merchants and make sure the fees are relative to the actual cost of processing those transactions. New rules capped interchange fees charged by big banks at 24 cents, excluding institutions with less than $10 billion in assets. This reduction, however, remains grossly out of sync with the costs to swipe a card. The banks continue to profit unfairly from the swipe fee paid for by not just merchants but consumers in the form of higher prices.
Read the Merchants Payments Coalition’s press release on Federal Reserve’s newest report here.
The average American household pays hundreds of dollars a year in credit and debit card swipe fees, which are part of the cost of virtually every transaction they make. Nearly $2 of every $100 consumers spend when they pay with plastic goes directly to Visa and MasterCard.The Merchants Payments Coalition is fighting for a more competitive and transparent credit card fee system that better serves consumers and merchants alike.
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