What happens when you pit the nations financial industry and wheelbarrows
full of campaign funds against debt-burdened low, moderate and middle-income
citizens backed only by a handful of consumer and poverty groups operating
without even a small sack of campaign goodies to spread around Capitol
Hill?
Answer: A legislative massacre. And massacre might be too mild a word
to apply to what has happened to consumer bankruptcy protections in the
U.S. Congress this year.
Gone is the concept that bankruptcy is designed to provide a second chance
a fresh start to citizens trapped in impossible debt situations
often resulting from illness, loss of jobs and unscrupulous lending practices.
In its place, the Congress has crafted a system that consumer advocates
say will force thousands of families into unaffordable repayment plans
which will be tantamount to an extended sentence to a debtors prison
without parole. Bankruptcy courts will become little more than glorified
bill collectors for the credit card companies, automobile dealers, banks
and other lenders, they say.
Theyve decided its time to lock the door to the bankruptcy
courthouse, says Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard law professor and bankruptcy
specialist.
Key to the demands of the banks and credit card companies is a provision
in both the House- and Senate-passed bills which imposes a tough inflexible
means test that will bar all but the most destitute from filing under
Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, which allows bankruptcy judges to grant
consumers relief from impossible debt burdens.
Under the new bankruptcy rules, instead of a second chance consumers
will be required to file under Chapter 13. This change will push already
financially devastated consumers into difficult repayment plans extending
years into the future, even if it means balancing overdue credit card
bills with alimony and child-support payments, obligations that received
priority under the old rules. The inability to get financial relief under
Chapter 7 increases the likelihood that modest-income families will lose
their homes and cars in Chapter 13 restructuring plans, further diminishing
the chances of resuming lives as productive members of their community.
Renters receive no special treatment under the legislation, but other
debtors many of them wealthy will be allowed to retain equity
in their homes after filing for bankruptcy in states with so-called homestead
laws. These include Texas, Florida, Iowa, Kansas and South Dakota. In
contrast, the legislation eliminates provisions of current law that allow
families to catch up on rent and avoid eviction.
The automobile industry and finance companies got a huge gift through
an amendment which eliminated the cram-down rules that allow
borrowers entering Chapter 13 bankruptcy to repay only an automobiles
market value plus interest, not the full value of the outstanding loan.
Under this rule, the debtor was allowed to keep the car with the remaining
portion of the loan considered along with debts owed to other unsecured
creditors such as retailers, credit card firms and medical providers.
Now, the automobile loan gets a priority position in squeezing funds from
the consumer in Chapter 13.
Passage of the bankruptcy bill follows a half decades lobbying
efforts by the credit industry and generous campaign contributions spread
widely in House and Senate races as well as in the last presidential election.
In the late 1990s, banks and credit card companies, including the American
Bankers Association, the American Financial Services Association and Visa
and MasterCard, formed the National Consumer Bankruptcy Coalition, a lobbying
group which pushed the issue for the industry.
Business interests framed the issue effectively, alleging that the bankruptcy
reforms were necessary to crack down on abuses of the system. The
number of bankruptcy filings has skyrocketed in recent years more
Americans file each year than graduate from college, said Thomas
Donohue, U.S. Chamber of Commerce president and CEO, upon Senate passage
of the bill. The Senate took a critical step today to prevent wealthy
debtors from passing the tab for mountains of debt on to businesses and
consumers.
Reform is long overdue to inject a sense of personal
responsibility back into a system run amok.
Contrary to the Chambers comments about wealthy debtors,
studies show that it is low and moderate income citizens who fill the
ranks of bankruptcy filers. A 1999 study conducted by bankruptcy judges
found that the median income of debtors seeking bankruptcy protection
was $21,500.
It wasnt arguments that greased the way to business victory. The
National Consumer Bankruptcy Coalition contributed more than $5 million
to candidates of both major parties in the 1999-2000 election cycle, according
to the Center for Responsive Politics. Overall, political campaign contributions
from finance and credit card companies totaled more than $9.2 million
last year, up from $1.9 million in 1992.
Smaller institutions like credit unions, community banks, and finance
companies also signed on to the attack on consumer bankruptcy protections.
As one observer of the mass lobbying campaign remarked: Theyve
hired every lobbying firm in Washington.
Highly visible in the campaign were lobbyists for MBNA, which bills itself
as the worlds biggest independent credit card company.
Overall, the political contributions attributed to MBNA and its employees
totaled $3.5 million in the last election, including $310,000 to the Republican
Senate Campaign Committee and $200,000 to the Democratic Senate Campaign
Committee.
MBNA employees and their families gave $240,000 to the presidential campaign
of George W. Bush. The chair of the companys bank unit was an important
fund raiser for Bush and sponsored a $1,000-a-plate dinner for him. And
just to make sure they were remembered at the White House, MBNA pledged
$100,000 to help pay for inaugural activities.
The White House has made it clear that the President intends to sign
the bankruptcy legislation when it reaches his desk. President Clinton
blocked a similar bill from becoming law with a pocket veto last December.
Using the bankruptcy courts as collection agencies obviously will be
lucrative for banks and credit card companies. Kenneth Posner, an analyst
for Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, says that the bankruptcy bill will mean
billions of dollars of additional income for creditors, predicting that
credit card industry profits will increase 5 percent next year as a result
of the legislation. By this estimate, based on its current performance,
MNBA would rake in $75 million more in profits in 2002.
Consumer groups are angered that Congressional supporters of the legislation
dodged the issue of deceptive practices which are increasingly employed
by credit card issuers, predatory lenders and other credit merchants to
lure unsuspecting consumers, many of them senior citizens, into mounting
debt that leads to bankruptcy. Aggressive marketing and lending practices
are on the increase, they say, while the industry lobbies for punitive
amendments to the bankruptcy law.
Recent class action lawsuits and regulatory agency complaints against
credit card companies have revealed a growing list of unscrupulous practices
designed to rip off consumers, including: charging late fees even when
payments are received on time; advertising deceptive teaser
interest rates that quickly skyrocket into unaffordable double digit interest
figures; worthless add-ons of high-cost credit life insurance; false promises
to eliminate annual fees; charges for processing applications; and frequent
increases in credit limits without regard to the ability of the credit
card holder to repay.
But, if these sleazy lending practices bothered many members of either
party, it did not show up in key votes on the bankruptcy legislation.
Votes in both the House of Representatives and the Senate reflected overwhelming
bi-partisan support for the positions of the banks, credit card companies
and others in the lending industry. The bills must now be reconciled in
a House-Senate Conference which will be dominated by supporters of the
legislation.
A handful of Democrats, including Senators Paul Wellstone of Minnesota,
Russell Feingold of Wisconsin and Richard Durbin of Illinois, led the
fight against the bill, but only 13 Senate Democrats opposed final passage
of the legislation. Thirty-six Democrats, including the Senates
Democratic leader, Tom Daschle of South Dakota, joined 47 Republicans
to give the credit industrys bill a resounding 83 to 15 approval.
Earlier in the session, the House of Representatives had voted 306 to
108 to adopt similar legislation. In the House, a majority of the Democrats
107, including the Democratic leader, Richard Gephardt of Missouri,
voted against the legislation. They were joined by Vermonts Independent,
Representative Bernie Sanders. Ninety-three Democrats and 212 Republicans
and one Independent voted for the banks and credit card companies.
Jake Lewis is a banking specialist at the Center
for the Study of Responsive Law.
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