Thursday, March 1, 2007

Payday Loan Companies Team with Minority Groups

By Paul Rizzo
Payday Loan Writer

The Community Financial Services Association of America, the national trade association for payday advance loan lenders, is planning to spend $10 million for an advertising campaign that it says is intended to educate people on how to use payday loans wisely.

Consumer advocacy groups are highly critical of these cash advances because when the fees are annualized, they often amount to triple-digit interest rates — even more than 1,000 percent in some cases. The groups argue that the loans take advantage of cash-strapped consumers.

Cash Advance Funds ”This is a public relations act from an industry under heavy fire,” says Jean Ann Fox, director of consumer protection for the Consumer Federation of America. ”This is a move to derail state and congressional legislation.”

Instant payday loan lenders were banned from Georgia in 2004, although lawmakers there are considering letting them back in. Other state legislatures are considering restrictions on payday loans. Last year Congress passed a law forcing the industry to cap at 36 percent the annual interest rates on loans to military service members and their dependents.

Industry executives say their multimillion-dollar campaign is not an image booster. Rather, they call it an effort to encourage consumers to use payday advances in a responsible manner. They argue that payday loans are the more affordable route for people who find themselves in desperate need of money.

”If it only cost $10 to bounce a check, I’m not sure we would have nearly as big a payday loan industry,” says Don Gayhardt, president of Dollar Financial Corp., a payday lender. ”Payday loans are not predatory. We enhance the economic well-being of people.”

In fact, to show its commitment to helping people, the trade group is asking members to voluntarily implement new practices. The most notable is an extended payment plan for those borrowers who cannot immediately pay back their loan. At no cost, borrowers would be allowed to repay the loan over four pay periods.

For example, if a customer is paid every two weeks, he would get an additional two months to pay off the cash loan. If paid monthly, he would get an additional four months.

I have no doubt the media campaign will be successful. The ad I viewed, which features Darrin Andersen, president of the CFSA, has soft music and shows a child with his arm in a sling and a man on the side of the road with a car obviously in need of repair. The subliminal message: If you need money to fix a problem, we’re here for you.

Andersen advises that people should use payday advance loans only for unplanned short-term expenses. Borrow only what you feel you can comfortably repay, he says.

As the commercial plays out, we hear a woman’s soothing voice saying, ”Always use payday advances responsibly.”

Using a credit card to buy things you can’t pay off the next month is bad enough, but to borrow against your next paycheck is the very definition of irresponsibility. It’s an incredibly unwise financial move.

Unbelievably, several minority groups have partnered with CFSA to promote financial literacy. Why would they do this, I wondered, especially when so many quick cash loan storefronts are in economically depressed minority neighborhoods?

Well, it turns out there’s money in it for the minority groups. CFSA is giving about $2 million to fund financial literacy programs for two groups, according to its spokesmen, Steven Schlein.

The trade association is partnering with the National Conference of Black Mayors to host summits ”to teach young people the importance of building a solid financial future.” I certainly hope it’s a future that never involves a payday loan.

CFSA also is teaming up with the National Black Caucus of States Institute. As the trade group says in its release, the partnership will ”educate African-American legislators and community leaders on critical issues regarding consumer credit, and provide community volunteers with resources they need to educate consumers in their communities on how to become credit savvy.”

Clearly, the savvier one is the quick cash advance industry.

What better way to try to fend off regulation than to partner with minority groups supposedly looking out for the very people their opponents say the industry is taking advantage of.

SOURCE: The Washington Post

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