Between the unemployment rate report
that was released in early September, and the Census report on income
and poverty that was released on September 13, President Obama and
his team got great news about the economic status of the average
worker. Incomes are up a whopping 5.2 percent between 2014 and 2015;
the first time incomes have increased since 2007. The poverty rate
dropped 1.2 percentage points, to 13.5 percent, which translates into
3.5 million fewer people living in poverty. While the poverty rate is
still higher than it was in 2007, this sharp decrease in the poverty
rate is significant. Between the unemployment rate report, which
shows an unemployment rate at 4.9 percent, and the income and poverty
report, which shows a 2.4 million increase in the number of workers,
the Obama economic team can rightly assert that economic recovery has
trickled down.
Still,
poverty rates are way too high – almost one in four (24.1
percent) African American households lives in poverty. The number of
African American children in poverty, though falling, remains too
high (31.6 percent). And the number of people in “extreme
poverty” (with incomes at less than half the poverty line) is
alarming – more than ten percent of African Americans (and 6
percent of the total population) live in extreme poverty.
The
persistence of poverty, even in the face of good news, provides
opportunities for those whose riches come from the exploitation of
poor people. Those who provide payday loans are among the worst,
because they set up a debt trap that it is almost impossible for poor
people to escape from. Indeed, these predators treat the poor as
profit centers and enrich themselves from other people’s
misery. Even as we celebrate the economic progress of the past year,
we must ensure that usurious payday lenders are curtailed by
regulators who can restrict their ability to extract interest rates
in excess of 300 percent from the very poor.
This is
how it works – payday lenders provide “emergency”
loans for those people who have more month than money, and who simply
can’t make ends meet. They provide small loans for a fee of
something like $15 per $100 for 7 to 14 days. The loan may be secured
by a paycheck, a pre-dated check, or an automobile title. If the loan
is not paid back on time, a borrower may negotiate an “extension”,
which requires more fees. Repeated payday loans result in $3.5
billion in fees each year.
The
Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (CFPB) is considering
regulations to protect consumers from exploitation and usury from
short-term loans and auto title loans. A coalition of faith leaders,
is hoping that those who have been affected by the exploitive
practices of payday loans. They’ve asked people who have been
affected by payday loans to comment on their website,
FaithforFairLending.org, hoping that the CFPB will be influenced by
the experiences that many have had with payday lending.
Rev.
Sekinah Hamlin, who leads faith initiatives for the Center for
Responsible Lending, says that faith leaders have mobilized because
they expect that the payday lending industry will fight any
regulations to curtail their activity. The CFPB will be accepting
comments about payday lending until October 7, and the Center for
Responsible Lending (ResponsibleLending.org) hopes that people will
share letters and comments encouraging CFPB to curtail payday.
While
it is important to curtail payday lending so that low-income
borrowers can avoid the debt trap, the longer term solution to the
debt trap is better pay for people who could access traditional
credit options, or avoid debt altogether, if they earned reasonable
pay. The working families agenda that some in Congress have embraced
(which includes an increase in the minimum wage, among other
provisions to assist those on the bottom) is a step in the right
direction. The fight for $15, which would provide families at the
bottom with incomes of about $31,000 a year, would also alleviate
poverty and make it easier for people to make ends meet.
It is
important that those of us who care about economic justice make our
voices heard before October 7. To stop the payday loan debt trap and
encourage the CFBP to issue regulations that will protect those who
are so easily exploited, comment online at FaithforFairLending.org,
or send your comment to The Center for Responsible Lending, Faith and
Credit Roundtable, 302 W. Main Street, Durham, NC 27701.
Tackling
the payday lending issue, however, is only a small step toward
economic justice. Those who want economic justice must also be
committed to electing those who will implement a working families
agenda. The economic good news that was released early this month
does not mean that we are out of the woods around poverty issues.
|