Friday, October 13, 2006

Salt Lake Tribune Editorial: Cap Needed on Payday Loans’ Interest Rates

By Paul Rizzo
Payday Loan Writer

Paraphrased, an editorial in The Salt Lake Tribune expressed the following views:

The Salt Lake County Council's attempt to restrict fast cash loan lenders to one shop per 15,000 people has some merit in addressing the public-safety issues connected with such businesses.

But it's largely just a way to show the council's dislike for predatory lending companies that charge desperate customers an annual interest rate as much as 500 percent.

Unfortunately, the county government's hands are tied by the Legislature's refusal to get tough with such businesses and put a cap on the interest rates they can charge on their regular and no fax payday loans.

Consumer Cash Advances

Utah has no limits whatever on usury, a fact likely due to the business-friendly, predominantly Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Problem with payday advance providers: Payday lenders prey on people who are short of cash because of emergencies or poor budgeting, too often facilitating drug deals by providing the cash buyers immediately need.

The cash advance customers involved in the latter exchange tend to congregate around the lending business and can threaten the safety of people who live or work in the same neighborhood.

Limiting the number of payday loan lenders in a specific area may help deal with that problem, but does little to address the real issue: that legal cash loan sharks target those least able to pay and put them on a long road of financial servitude.

Military payday loan interest rate cap: At the request of the Pentagon, Congress recently passed a provision in the defense authorization bill that imposes a 36 percent annual rate cap on payday loans to servicemen and women beginning Oct. 1, 2007.

The Pentagon reported to Congress that 17 percent of the military, many of them 18 or 19 years old, use instant payday loans. The report said such "predatory lending" hurts morale and "undermines military readiness."

An interest-rate cap is justified to protect those serving in the military, and it is just as important to protect vulnerable civilians, including Utahns.

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