Sunday, May 18, 2008

Money & Business

USN Current Issue
Alpha Consumer by Kimberly Palmer

Five-Star Rating for Credit Cards Under Fire

February 25, 2008 04:12 PM ET | Kimberly Palmer | Permanent Link

This morning, I heard Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, flesh out his and Sen. Barack Obama's proposal to create a five-star rating system for credit cards during a conference at the Center for American Progress Action Fund. If a card issuer changed its terms for unfair reasons, it would get a low rating, but if it gave consumers sufficient time to switch cards, it would get a higher one, he said. Wyden compared the concept to the five-star safety ratings for new cars, which he said created extra incentives for car makers to create safer cars.

But a few minutes later, Jonathan Orszag, senior managing director at the economic consultancy Compass Lexecon, criticized the concept on the grounds that consumers are a diverse group, and one person's five-star card might be a one-star to someone else.

I, too, have wondered how the rating system would reflect different consumer preferences and habits. For example, someone who pays off the balance each month should look for a card that offers rewards, while someone who carries a balance should simply go for the lowest interest rate. So what would the government—under Wyden's proposal, the Federal Reserve—rate a card with a high interest rate and no rewards?

Plus—to paraphrase Ralph Nader before he was a presidential candidate—for some debt-ridden consumers, credit cards will be unsafe at any rate.

Tags: credit cards | presidential election 2008 | Barack Obama

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Reader Comments

throw the baby out with the bath water?

Are you saying that providing some (but not enough in your opinion) information is a bad idea, so we should get no information about credit cards?

It seems like it is already easy enough to find out about interest rates and rewards, I'm more worried about the stuff that is buried in the fine print, which is what this rating system seems focused on. I'm assuming that the star rating will be accompanied by an explanation of why they got the rating, which the consumer can use to decide if that is important to them.

If the Obama/Wyden bill doesn't go far enough, what kind of information would you like to see?

Exactly

I totally agree with wm of OR. The tease terms are always in large print. But to understand all the legal terms in micro-print, the credit card companies should have to answer to someone for increasing your interest rate for some out of the blue reason. I, personally like the idea of the five-star rating for credit cards and again, well said wm.

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