This is a good news for you if you are a credit card holder and are from the USA. It may not be a cause for rejoicing for those credit card holders living in other less privileged parts of the world. Good news is that the Federal Reserve adopted new rules Tuesday aimed at protecting  credit card customers from getting socked by lofty late payment charges  and other penalty fees. The rules respond to public and congressional  outrage over practices by credit card companies.
They bar credit card companies from charging a penalty fee of more  than $25 for paying a bill late. They prohibit credit card companies  from charging penalty fees that are higher than the dollar amount  associated with the customer’s violation. They also ban so-called  “inactivity” fees when customers don’t use the account to make new  purchases and they prevent multiple penalty fees on a single late  payment. The rules take effect on Aug. 22.
“Consumers will finally be protected from the worst credit card  issuer abuses,” said Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., a major advocate for  the changes as reported by CBS  News.
In addition, the rules require companies to reconsider interest rates  imposed on customers since the start of last year. Some lenders pushed  through rate increases ahead of the first phase of sweeping new  credit-card protections, which took effect earlier this year. Those  first set of rules were designed to protect customers from sudden hikes  in interest rates.
Congress directed the Fed to implement the new credit card  protections in legislation signed into law by President Barrack Obama  last year. “The new rules require that late payment and other penalty  fees be assessed in a way that is fairer and generally less costly for  consumers,” said Fed Governor Elizabeth Duke, the central bank’s point  person on the rules. “Card issuers must also reevaluate recent interest  rate increases, and, if appropriate, reduce the rate,” she added.
Legislation in Congress revamping the nation’s financial regulatory  structure could reduce the Fed’s influence over consumer protections. A  Senate-passed bill would house a watchdog agency inside the Fed, but  chairman Ben Bernanke would have no authority over it. A House-passed  bill would set up a new agency devoted to consumer protection and would  strip the Fed of some of its consumer oversight. Lawmakers are working  to reconcile the bills into a final package.
A new agency devoted to consumer protection? wow. God bless America....It is truly God's own country.
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