Danny Katz
Executive Director, CoPIRG
Executive Director, CoPIRG
CoPIRG Foundation
Denver – Consumer complaints about payday loans to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) show a critical need for strengthening the agency’s proposed rule to rein in payday loans and other high-cost lending, according to a report released today by the CoPIRG Foundation.
“Our analysis of written complaints to the CFPB found significant evidence of the major problem with payday loans: borrowers can’t afford these loans and end up trapped in a cycle of debt. Ninety-one percent (91%) of written complaints were related to unaffordability,” said Danny Katz, Director of the CoPIRG Foundation.
Payday lenders offer short-term high-cost loans at interest rates averaging 391% APR in the 36 states that allow them and a short period of time to pay them back. Colorado is one of those 36 states but state reforms in 2010 reduced the fees on an average loan by 71% and improved loan terms. Despite this progress, payday loans are still a debt trap. According to a Bell Policy Center analysis, Coloradans pay nearly as much in fees as they do in principal – $341 in fees to borrow $398 for 11 months.
Far too many borrowers can’t afford these rates but are given the loans anyway — which sets them up to take out multiple loans after the first one and fall into a debt trap. The lender holds an uncashed check as collateral. Increasingly lenders are also making installment loans and loans using car titles as collateral. According to CFPB research, nationally payday lenders make 75% of their fees from borrowers stuck in more than 10 loans a year. Fourteen states and the District of Columbia effectively ban payday loans by subjecting them to low usury ceilings.
In June, the CFPB proposed a rule that takes an historic step by requiring, for the first time, that payday, auto title, and other high-cost installment lenders determine whether customers can afford to repay loans with enough money left over to cover normal expenses without re-borrowing. However, as currently proposed, payday lenders will be exempt from this ability-to-repay requirement for up to six loans a year per customer.
“To truly protect consumers from the debt trap, it will be important for the CFPB to close exceptions and loopholes like this one in what is otherwise a well-thought-out proposal. We encourage the public to submit comments by October 7th to the CFPB about strengthening the rule before it is finalized,” Katz said.
To access the stories from Coloradans about payday loans on the CFPB consumer complaint database, go to http://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/consumer-complaints/ then click on “Read Consumer Narratives.” Then sort “Sub-product” category by “Payday Loans” and sort “State” category by “CO.”