Posts Tagged ‘durbin amendment’

MasterCard and Discover minimum maximum transaction limits

Friday, December 10th, 2010

MasterCard and Discover Card Brands Revise Minimum Transaction Amount Rules. Effective immediately, MasterCard and Discover announced a revision to their rules permitting Merchants the ability to set a minimum transaction amount of up to $10 on a Card Sale or Cash Advance when the purchase is made with a Credit Card (a card account that accesses a credit account) and does not differentiate between issuers or other card acceptance brands. Setting a minimum transaction amount limit for debit cards (Pin Debit or Signature Debit) is still prohibited

See related article Visa, MasterCard minimum transaction limit changes which highlights how this rule came about from the Durbin Amendment, passed and signed into law, July 2010.

Visa, MasterCard minimum transaction limit changes

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Visa and MasterCard merchant card acceptance policies state that merchants cannot set a minimum for accepting credit cards on a transaction. If you accept the card, you must accept for all transactions. This has not stopped businesses, especially restaurants and quick stop stores from posting signs with $10 minimum charge. The repercussion for merchants can be fines and removal of card acceptance privileges. Additionally there are state laws that address this issue and conflict with the card association regulations.

Why do merchants want to set a minimum fee? The problem is the high cost of credit and debit card processing relative to their profit margins. For example, a typical sale costs the merchant a percentage rate and a per item fee. If 2% plus $.20 per item, that’s the equivalent of 4% fee for accepting a card for payment.

The 2010 Durbin amendment specifically addresses this issue in this section:

  • Setting of maximum/minimum transaction thresholds for use of a credit card
The Senate-passed amendment provided that card networks could not prevent merchants from setting a minimum or maximum dollar amount for payment by credit card.
The compromise provides that such a minimum may not exceed $10, with authority given to the Fed to increase that dollar amount. The compromise also limits the ability to set maximums for payment by credit card to the Federal government and colleges and universities. The compromise further clarifies the Senate language and establishes that a minimum payment not exceed $10 matching laws currently on the books in a number of states.

It’s important to note that the Durbin Amendment is still a work in progress that will give the Federal Reserve new powers. Not everyone thinks this is a great idea, as we published in the article

Financial Industry responds Durbin amendment on interchange

Financial Industry responds Durbin amendment on interchange is

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Is the Durbin amendment good for consumers? For Merchants? Readers outside the industry probably look at the news articles and think it’s all good. However, if you dig deeper and hear opposing business views, you may begin to question those conclusions. Like the complex interchange system itself, the complexities of repercussions also need to be dealt with to determine what’s best for everyone.

While there are surely self serving interests in some of these articles, I think it’s worth perusing to come to your own conclusions.

List of articles of interest:

From Visa’s Viewpoints blog June 17, 2010: Industry Experts Agree: Problematic Durbin Amendment misses the Mark

The Root Interview: Russell Simmons on His RushCard

Durbin Amendment on interchange fees update

Monday, July 12th, 2010
Durbin, Key House Conferees Reach Agreement on Interchange Fees
Monday, June 21, 2010

[WASHINGTON, D.C.] Assistant Senate Majority Leader Dick Durbin (D-IL) today announced that an agreement has been reached with key conferees on the Wall Street reform bill regarding his amendment regulating interchange fees. The agreement makes minor, clarifying changes to the language which passed the Senate 64-33, and responds to concerns raised by state governments regarding their use of prepaid and debit cards distribution of government benefits.

I’m pleased that we were able to reach an agreement which makes modifications which strengthen consumer protections and bring competition to a market where there is none,” Durbin said. “We addressed specific concerns of states serving the unemployed and firms serving the unbanked. This was a good faith effort with House conferees to face legitimate issues and resolve them fairly without surrendering our goals of bringing fairness to interchange fees and common sense regulation to the credit card industry. I applaud the leadership of Chairmen Frank and Dodd in reaching this milestone agreement.”

Under the agreement, the new language will be offered by the House to the Senate during the conference negotiations on the Wall Street reform package as early as tomorrow. It is expected to be debated and eventually accepted by the conference committee, subject to ratification by the Committee Chairmen, and become the final language regarding interchange fees. The conference committee hopes to finish its work on the bill this week and the House and Senate are expected to pass the final legislation before July 4th.

Summary of the modifications to the Durbin interchange amendment:

  • Government administered cards
The Senate-passed amendment would regulate the interchange fees associated with debit or prepaid cards issued by large banks on behalf of government-administered payment programs (e.g., unemployment insurance, TANF, child support).
The compromise exempts federal, state and local government program debit and prepaid cards from interchange regulation, provided that after a two-year grace period the prepaid cardholding beneficiaries are not charged any overdraft fees or fees for the first monthly in-network ATM withdrawal.
The Senate-passed amendment defined interchange transaction fees to include debit card fees that are established by a payment card network (e.g., Visa and MasterCard) and that accrue to either the card-issuing bank or to the network itself.
The compromise provides that the Fed cannot regulate network fees (i.e., the fees that Visa and MasterCard charge and that accrue to themselves) except to ensure that the fees are not used to circumvent interchange fee regulation. These changes are a different way of accomplishing the same goal of protecting consumers from loopholes which would allow banks to raise fees to cover any loss in interchange revenue.
  • Reloadable prepaid cards
The Senate-passed amendment would regulate the interchange fees associated with reloadable prepaid debit cards, which are in common use by consumers who lack bank accounts.
The compromise exempts these cards from interchange regulation, provided that after a two-year grace period the issuing bank must not charge cardholders any overdraft fees or fees for the first monthly in-network ATM withdrawal. The compromise is an attempt to protect the unbanked from being driven to payday lenders and other non-bank entities for their financial needs. It further ensures that fees won’t be charged on those who can least afford them.
  • Fraud prevention costs
The Senate-passed amendment did not permit consideration of fraud prevention costs in the calculation of reasonable and proportional interchange rates.
The compromise provides that the Fed can adjust the interchange fee rate received by a particular card-issuing bank if the bank demonstrates that the adjustment is reasonably necessary to cover fraud prevention costs incurred by the bank. In order to qualify for this adjustment, the bank would have to comply with standards established by the Fed that would demonstrate that the bank is taking effective steps to reduce fraud, and the bank would also have to show that the adjustment it seeks is limited to those reasonably necessary fraud prevention costs. This compromise provides competition where there is currently none. Banks will be incentivized to efficiently and effectively prevent fraud while competing to provide the best protection for the lowest cost. These changes will make the market more efficient and allow for savings to be passed on to consumers.
  • Discounting between card networks
The Senate-passed amendment provided that card networks could no longer prevent merchants from offering customers a discount to use one card network vs. another (e.g., a discount to use Visa vs. MasterCard), and that this discount would apply in both the credit card and debit card contexts.
This provision has been removed from the amendment.  In its place, the compromise includes a provision directing the Fed to issue rules preventing card networks from requiring that their debit cards can only be used on one debit card network (thereby ensuring that merchants will have the choice of at least two networks upon which to run debit transactions). This provision also provides additional competition to a previously non-competitive part of the market. It allows merchants to choose the debit network with the lowest cost the opposite of the current system where merchants are forced to use a specific network with fixed prices.
  • Discounting between forms of payment
The Senate-passed amendment provided that card networks cannot prevent merchants from offering a discount for one form of payment vs. another (cash vs. check vs. credit vs. debit). The compromise clarifies that these discounts cannot be offered if the discounts differentiate between card issuers or card networks.
The compromise further clarifies that the discount must be offered to all prospective buyers and disclosed clearly and conspicuously to the extent required by federal and applicable state law, though a network would not be permitted to penalize a merchant for a discount that is provided in compliance with federal and state law. This change simply clarifies the language in the Senate bill which allowed merchants the ability to offer discounts for one form of payment over another.
  • Setting of maximum/minimum transaction thresholds for use of a credit card
The Senate-passed amendment provided that card networks could not prevent merchants from setting a minimum or maximum dollar amount for payment by credit card.
The compromise provides that such a minimum may not exceed $10, with authority given to the Fed to increase that dollar amount. The compromise also limits the ability to set maximums for payment by credit card to the Federal government and colleges and universities. The compromise further clarifies the Senate language and establishes that a minimum payment not exceed $10, matching laws currently on the books in a number of states.
  • Non-discrimination between cards issued by different banks
The Senate-passed amendment did not change the existing prohibition in the operating rules of Visa and MasterCard against card issuer discrimination.
The compromise amendment contains a rule of construction affirmatively stating that nothing shall be construed to authorize any person to discriminate between debit cards or between credit cards on the basis of the issuer who issued the card.  This language further clarifies the Senate passed language regarding non-discrimination between card issuers.
  • Authority of the Federal Reserve Board vs. the Consumer Financial Protection Agency/Bureau
The Senate-passed amendment provided for regulatory authority under the amendment to migrate to the Consumer Financial Protection Agency/Bureau after the CFPA/B is established.
The compromise provides that regulatory authority under the amendment shall remain with the Fed.
  • Non-applicability to USDA nutrition assistance program EBT cards
The Senate-passed amendment was silent on the applicability of the amendment to USDA’s nutrition assistance programs in which interchange fees are not charged for electronic benefit transfer (EBT) transactions.
The compromise makes clear that nothing in the amendment shall apply to these nutrition assistance programs.

Durbin worked closely on these changes with House and Senate conferees including: Chairmen Dodd and Frank, Rep. Meeks, Rep. Maloney, Rep. Gutierrez and Rep. Welch.

Reference original blog post

Senate Approves Debit-Card Swipe-Fee Limits in Bill

Follow the Durbin Amendment in Congress Bill Summary & Status 111th Congress (2009 – 2010)
S.AMDT.3989