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Bailout Plan Hits the Poor
When Congress hastily created and passed the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) last fall to bail out the financial sector, the program didn’t offer any consumer protection against the type of predatory lending practices that led to the financial crisis. It came as no surprise, then, when Santa Barbara Bank & Trust, a self-described “community bank” in California, announced in January that it was intending to use its $180 million in bailout money to make high-priced refund anticipation loans, known as RALs.
RALs are short-term loans borrowed against a consumer’s tax refund. They’re often advertised as “quick cash,” because they allow people to get their tax refund in days instead of waiting for the IRS, which can take at least 10 days. Historically, poor communities have been targeted for these loans. According to the IRS, 85 percent of the people who took RALs in 2006 had incomes of $37,300 or less, and nearly two-thirds were recipients of the Earned Income Tax Credit. On average, a person pays between $200 and $500 in fees for a RAL.
This tax season, it’s expected that low-income taxpayers will pay more than $1 billion in fees and triple-digit interest rates associated with RALs.
Refund anticipation loans are made by a handful of banks, including HSBC, JP Morgan Chase and Santa Barbara Bank & Trust. The banks give tax preparers—including H&R Block and Jackson Hewitt, as well as preparers found at places like used car lots—a share of
the hundreds of dollars in “application,” “processing”
and “e-file” fees that can be made from a single loan.
While refund anticipation loans can be classified as abusive, predatory loans, they escape government regulation because they are bank loans, Wu said. National banks are immune to state consumer protection laws. Other than requiring full disclosure about RALs, all most states can do is sue for the fraud frequently associated with these loans.
Recently, the IRS began to implement the initial phase of a new system to process tax returns and issue refunds within 48 to 72 hours. “While this is significant, the refund anticipation loan business is anticipating this,” said Kimberly S. Jones of the California Reinvestment Coalition, a group that advocates for fair access to banking and financial services. “Now, some preparers provide RALs where you can walk out of there with a check or a check card. But it’s still a good thing, because it shortens the amount of time that they can accrue interest.”
Staff from the California Reinvestment Coalition and other groups recently met with Congress members to alert them to how bailout money was being used. “There was a lack of awareness on how TARP funds were being used” said Jones, who added that the groups are going to keep pressing Congress and the media about this “because there is a genuine, and appropriate, disgust with how TARP has been spent.”

19 Comments so far
Show AllWhat did they expect? They handed the banks taxpayer money and then walked away. No questions asked. This can't have been accidental considering the behavior of the banks that led to TARP. There is still no demand for accountability about how the banks are using TARP. What is it Geithner doesn't want us to find out?
And now I read that Obama is pushing for the FED to oversee banking behavior. That's just great. They're quietly guaranteeing $10 trillion to cover an estimated $600 trillion in toxic assets. Some oversight. I think it's time to shut down the Federal Reserve Board. And we appear to have the wrong administration to get this right.
While we're at it, I want to know why the military has stopped sharing information with scientists about incoming meteorites? Only they get to know what's headed for us? And why is that?
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
sheesh.... what new double-good-quack-speak idea will those bankers come up with next?
Put "quadrillion dollars" into a search engine. Some interesting articles turn up.
The poor?
Ah, the poor are always with us!
It's the RICH who are perpetually so bedeviled, beset, and endangered by constant attack from desperate and envious have-nots!
So naturally the government must clasp the Rich to its bosom, and wrap its protective and comforting mantle around the most obscenely wealthy and prosperous class in Amerikan society.
God knows what they're doing under that mantle. The rest of us are too busy foraging for, and clinging to, the crumbs that fall out from beneath that monolithic garment. Who has time or power to peer up from underneath?
· Yr Obd't Servant
Yes, but to keep "them" with "us," "we" need to keep making fresh poor.
Sooner or later, friends, them pitchforks need sharpenin' and them torch sticks need dipped. There's basically no more room in my ass for another Fist of Power.
well said
Everyone with a net worth of over five million dollars must die.
Ha! Any particular reason for the 5 mill cut off? And will you exempt lottery winners?:)
Rock on.
Just a number out of thin air.
They will. Then, if there is a karmic afterlife, things will get interesting for them.
"BeForKids June 14th, 2009 12:42 pm
What did they expect? They handed the banks taxpayer money and then walked away. No questions asked. This can't have been accidental considering the behavior of the banks that led to TARP. There is still no demand for accountability about how the banks are using TARP. What is it Geithner doesn't want us to find out?"
I DON'T KNOW the answer, but it's obvious that he's hiding something The People are not supposed to know about. And you're right about this not being accidental, which (I think) should also be obvious by now.
BeForKids:
"And now I read that Obama is pushing for the FED to oversee banking behavior. That's just great. They're quietly guaranteeing $10 trillion to cover an estimated $600 trillion in toxic assets. Some oversight. I think it's time to shut down the Federal Reserve Board. And we appear to have the wrong administration to get this right."
YOU HAVE that right, but there's another little matter that's related and it's that the Fed. Res. is run by bankers, or banksters; run by them, or owned and run by them (forgetting which). I think to recall having understood that the Fed. Res. was quite fully placed into the hands of bank(st)ers, including ownership, instead of only "management". But maybe it's only the latter while ... then I don't know who'd be the owner(s). Recently, I read that the Fed. Res. is definitely not part of the government of the USA, which, if it was, would make it owned by taxpayers or The People. So, given the population clearly is not the owner through its government and someone must own the Fed. Res, I assume it's banksters that both own and run it.
So, iow, or more briefly, Obama is clearly working to have oversight (the kind that of course must overlook things, instead of paying attention to and reporting on them) by bank(st)ers running the Fed. Res. to (we're supposed to believe anyway) hold other bank(st)ers accountable; while also including themselves (we're also supposed to believe).
Now that's quite a "recipe" that Obama has for "correcting" the situation. "What a guy (or sport), eh?".
BeForKids:
"While we're at it, I want to know why the military has stopped sharing information with scientists about incoming meteorites? Only they get to know what's headed for us? And why is that?"
Incoming meteorites? Do you know where we can read more about this astronomically interesting topic?
MikeCorbeil, I read an AP story, although the link below is not that. If you Google (as I did) "military sharing meteorite information scientists" a number of links will come up. I get very suspicious when things like this happen. What do they see that they are hiding?? Of course, past experience with our government has taught me considerable distrust of their intentions.
http://www.nowpublic.com/tech-biz/astronomers-lose-access-military-data
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is trying to sell the government a Plan B criticized for imposing a virtual 'shutdown' on the state.
Gray Davis must be laughing his head off! The ChristoPublicans got what they wished for.
They did. You must figure Davis for an odd sense of humor.
"The poor complain, they always do,
But that's just idle chatter.
Our system brings rewards to all,
At least to all who matter."
(Gerald Helleiner)
Repeat ad infinitum, ad nauseum.
Last year, passing that bailout package was correctly compared to passing the "Patriot" Act and yet Congress chose to screw up yet again. Even when it failed to pass, that bitch Pelosi was quick to revive it, something she'd never bother doing with SCHIP. I can't be too surprised at this.
BeForKids ,
Thanks. I'll read the article at NowPublic.com and tried the Web search using the search words you listed and this works alright; turning up relevant links for several articles in the first page of Web search results.
It's certainly odd that the U.S. military and therefore government would want to keep this sort of data secret, but maybe doing this is to make people "afraid, very, very afraid", with the aim of trying to keep people controlled in terms of dependance on "Big Brother" government; the leaders of which know best what we need, and not, including how best to watch over our personal safety, we're supposed to believe, that is. After these past eight years of fearmongering, incessant government lying, etcetera, this shenanigan act by the military seems as if it may entirely be just more fearmongering crap; instead of there being anything for us to seriously fear from meteorites, which have been striking Earth for ..., oh, a very, very long time already.
After all, they still want us to believe that Usama Bin Ladin remains alive today, that Al Qa'ida is out to destroy our (so-called) democracy and freedom, etcetera; oh, including the new bit from Obama, about Al Qa'ida is going to hit the U.S. through cyber attacks on the U.S. government, military, banks, and so on. Like, yeah, right; sure, okay. BS!
In any case, all we need to do is to look up now and then to see if there's an incoming meteorite heading our way and, when there is, if we have enough time to get out of the way before it strikes and then do so. Wear tin hats, maybe. People who have football helmets, say, can walk around wearing these; maybe steel-plated football helmets would be better though.
Hey, if we're lucky, then we'll have a huge one come in and smash the White House, Pentagon, and so on. Now that would make for a really nice and welcome INDEPENDENCE DAY fireworks display. :)
My father used to excuse his nationalist anti-unionism with the saying, "A rising tide lifts all boats."
When this $$ enters the economy, the rising tide will sink many boats.