Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Money & Business

Alpha Consumer by Kimberly Palmer

Student Credit Cards: Useful or a Trap?

June 30, 2008 01:40 PM ET | Kimberly Palmer | Permanent Link | Print

At a hearing on credit card practices affecting college students, Democratic Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York, chair of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, last week asked Benjamin Lawsky, special assistant to New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, to tell what his office's investigations had uncovered.

Lawsky began by warning the committee that he could not disclose much. While Cuomo's investigations had found "highly lucrative" and "somewhat secret" agreements between credit card companies and colleges that allowed the companies to market on their campuses, the bulk of the investigation would need to remain secret until an unspecified future date.

But Lawsky was willing to compare the agreements to the under-the-table deals where lenders paid schools or financial aid officers in exchange for placement on schools' preferred lender lists. Credit card marketing, he said, included using peer pressure to get students to sign up for cards, giving away gifts, and paying for affinity arrangements that allowed card providers to cobrand cards with schools.

Brett Thurman, undergraduate student government president at the University of Illinois-Chicago, shared his own food-for-credit story. A credit card representative offered him a coupon for a Subway sandwich, but when he got to the Subway (located near campus), another representative told him that he would have to fill out a form first. When he asked if applying for the card would hurt his credit report, Thurman says that the representative told him it would not—which is probably incorrect. Applications for credit are reported to credit bureaus, and just applying for a new credit card can have a negative impact on credit scores.

In an attempt to counteract the credit industry-bashing, Kenneth Clayton, managing director and general counsel at the American Bankers Association, pointed out in his testimony that only 35 percent of college students carry balances on their cards, and most handle their credit cards responsibly. Access to credit enables students to fly home for the holidays or get help in emergencies, he added.

The committee soon entered into the debate currently rocking the personal finance world: Do consumers just need to be better educated, or are financial products themselves the problem? The banking industry usually argues that financial literacy is the solution to unmanageable consumer debt, while consumer advocates say the financial world needs to be easier for consumers to understand and navigate. As Christine Lindstrom, higher education project director at U.S. Public Interest Research Group, put it, "The products are poisonous."

As soon as she uttered those words, Rep. Judy Biggert, an Illinois Republican and ranking minority member of the subcommittee, jumped in and gave the floor to Clayton, who gave Biggert the answer she was looking for: The solution, Clayton said, is to empower and educate consumers.

But Rep. Mel Watt, a North Carolina Democrat, wasn't satisfied with that answer. Watts himself receives so-called convenience checks—checks from his credit card company that he never asked for and, if cashed, would carry a high interest rate—in the mail, and it makes him mad. Did Clayton think convenience checks are an appropriate practice?

"I am not prepared to respond," says Clayton, before adding that for some people, convenience checks may, indeed, be convenient.

Tags: credit cards | marketing | students

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Reader Comments

These idiots in Congress don't realize that students, just like everyone else in this country, have one word in their arsenal that can go a long way to teaching financial responsibility. That word? NO. Say NO to people who offer credit cards, do NOT cash convenience checks which are an obvious ploy to get your business, do NOT believe the hype about 0% APR for the first 6 months, do NOT go online to apply for cards, do NOT apply unless you are absolutely certain you will only use the card for emergencies.

Take it from someone who couldn't say NO, and is now living with the consequences of having poor credit and having to delay spending. This wasn't because credit card companies were marketing to me, because they were. It was because when I got the applications, I applied for all of them, even though I knew I didn't need the credit and I didn't have the money to afford them.

Personal responsibility cannot, I repeat CANNOT, be legislated. The only thing Congress is going to do is meddle in things they don't understand, and make the markets even worse for those whom they intend to help.

Youth and their credit issues

I came close to using a convenience check to pay my rent, because I am experiencing the worst financial aid problems in the world. Basically the money I thought I had to pay rent isn't there...I only almost used it because I knew I would have the cash in hand to pay off the check when it posted to the account.

As for student credit cards, how are you supposed to build credit without one? Although my credit cards are not and have never been school branded, I will admit to caving and getting the Disney rewards Visa so that I could carry mickey mouse in my wallet. As for 0% the first x months, my offer was 0% the first 12 months but Chase tried to start charging interest after 6 months, until I overnighted the terms of my card agreement to them. Promotional interest periods work for those who intend to pay it off by the end of the period.

Credit Card Practices & College Students

Good story on subcommittee work at its best, but we could have all just rented "it's a Wonderful LIfe" instead. Clearly Rep. Maloney was presiding over a dryer version of George Bailey vs. Mr. Potter.

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Kimberly Palmer, senior editor for U.S. News & World Report, writes about how to save money, avoid scams, manage debt, and be a savvy shopper. Share with her your own money issues by sending questions to alphaconsumer@usnews.com.

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