Washington Update Rob Nichols, President and CEO, American Bankers Association Beating Back a Bad Idea: How Bankers United to Play Defense Against Durbin Expansion There’s a saying that “everything old is new again,” and that’s certainly an adage you can bank on in Washington, D.C. — especially when it comes to poor public policy proposals. A textbook example of this unfolded during the 117th Congress when our industry found itself once again facing a bad idea that we thought had been soundly defeated: placing restrictive routing mandates on credit cards, like those imposed on debit cards by the Durbin Amendment over a decade ago. The idea came in the form of a bipartisan bill — the so-called Credit Card Competition Act — introduced in the Senate by Sens. Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Roger Marshall (R-KS) and in the House by Reps. Peter Welch (D-VT) and Lance Gooden (R-TX). Bankers know all too well that the 2010 Durbin Amendment had disastrous consequences for banks and their customers: it increased the costs of checking accounts and debit cards and ultimately led to the elimination of popular debit card rewards programs. The Durbin Amendment’s most damaging provisions apply to banks of all sizes, causing a nearly 25% cut in the pertransaction debit card revenue earned by banks with under $10 billion in assets. At the same time, it helped line the pockets of large retailers who talked a big game about passing savings on to consumers — but 10 years’ worth of data tells us that simply isn’t what happened. In fact, the Federal Reserve published a study finding that only 1% of merchants lowered prices for consumers since the Durbin price controls took effect. 12
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