ext_90803 (
badlydrawnjeff.livejournal.com) wrote in
talkpolitics2011-09-30 12:57 pm
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A Lesson in Unnecessary Regulation
By now, you've probably heard about Bank of America's plan to begin charging $5/month on the customer side for debit card usage. What you probably haven't heard of is why:
This follows many banks ending free checking in large part to the regulations in the Dodd-Frank bill limiting debit overdraft fees. This will likely not be the last time we see banks making more adjustments, either.
Regulations matter. The negative impact of regulatory action when it's not needed only ends up hurting the rest of us in the long run. In a misguided rush by the left to "protect" the population from evil, predatory banks, all you've done is now made it harder for those who you profess to represent and care about the most to use banking services. Congratulations on another job well done.
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Bank of America Corp. (BAC), the largest U.S. bank by assets, plans to charge customers a $5 monthly fee for making debit card purchases starting early next year, according to an internal memo sent to bank executives Thursday.
...
Bank of America is trying to cushion revenue losses it expects to incur from new caps on the fees merchants pay when a customer uses a debit card at their stores. In June, the Federal Reserve Board finalized rules capping such fees at 24 cents per transaction, compared with a current average of 44 cents.
...
Other banks have introduced or are testing new fees in response to the debit fee caps, which stem from a provision known as the Durbin amendment in last year's Dodd-Frank financial regulation overhaul legislation.
This follows many banks ending free checking in large part to the regulations in the Dodd-Frank bill limiting debit overdraft fees. This will likely not be the last time we see banks making more adjustments, either.
Regulations matter. The negative impact of regulatory action when it's not needed only ends up hurting the rest of us in the long run. In a misguided rush by the left to "protect" the population from evil, predatory banks, all you've done is now made it harder for those who you profess to represent and care about the most to use banking services. Congratulations on another job well done.
Re: Note to the economically ignorant:
Re: Note to the economically ignorant:
The absolutely main problem of libertarians is the refusal to admit that the "free market" can have monopolizing tendencies and can support bad business practices indefinitely. The almost unregulated early 1900s had food producers almost universally had unsafe practices, and there is absolutely zero evidence to support that they would have stopped without government intervention. In fact, companies like Heinz had safe production of food, advertised their food as being mold-free, organic, prepared safely and ethically, but they still lost out to moldy food producers until regulation.
To make the claim that not only would food quality make a reverse and start going up instead of down despite very few people making use of the decades-old methods of ethical and safe food production is basically pure conjecture. It's projecting a fantasy and not using the kind of evidence-based reasoning that explains history.
I'm not seeing in yours, or any other libertarian's comments that tells me they can admit ANY fault in their hypothetical free market. They don't see ANY unintended consequences and assume exact behaviors for people participating in the market. It's extremely idealistic and has zero chance of ever happening, so why do they cling to this fantasy instead of pursuing realistic changes to the market? Why do both libertarians and socialists think that their dreams will ever come true? That governments will go 'Yeah, your unsupported hypothetical theories are worth a shot' and dismantle the entire current economy to prop up this grand experiment.
If you think the free market can somehow be attained gradually, that's a complete pipe dream. There is no reason, ever, for the government to stop being a very real and tangible part of what makes up the modern market. Especially in this age of globalization. Nations have nothing to gain from dismantling their regulatory structures and sending their fates to the wolves, so to speak.
It's like getting rid of traffic laws and expecting everyone to universally continue practicing safe driving standards.
Re: Note to the economically ignorant:
Right, that's the problem, you don't see what's being said, you're stuck with your idea of what's being said.
Same here, that's what you see, not what's said.
I agree, it will only happen when the revolution comes. People with power don't willingly give it up.
And yet, that's exactly what's happened when it's been tried.
Re: Note to the economically ignorant:
And yet, that's exactly what's happened when it's been tried.
In bumfuck nowhere or NYC?
Re: Note to the economically ignorant:
Re: Note to the economically ignorant:
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,2143663,00.html
http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,448747,00.html
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=removing-roads-and-traffic-lights
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.12/traffic.html
http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/02/london-seeks-to-reduce-congestion-by-eliminating-traffic-lights/
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23740921-boris-johnson-plans-to-remove-traffic-lights-to-make-roads-safer.do