I have to admit that I don’t like banks. Their persnickety rules and condescending attitudes have irritated me over the years in more ways than I can list here. So this might be the first time that I’ve ever been forced to defend a bank. Well, sort of, anyway.
You might have heard the news that Bank of America is instituting a $5-per-month charge for customers using its debit card. When I first heard this, I was outraged, because I knew that the banks were compensated by getting a small slice of each transaction the card is used for. What I didn’t realize at first, though, is that Congress just intervened in the market to cut that fee almost in half, taking away a big chunk of revenue for the banks.
Previously, every time you used your debit card, the bank received a fee from the merchant of 44 cents for handling the transaction. But in an amendment to the Dodd-Frank financial law, Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) got that fee cut to 24 cents per swipe. In one giant bite, banks had their income from their debit card operations slashed by roughly 45 percent.
In a saner world, we would never hear a word about Jussie Smollett
Time and maturity should change what we believe we need in mates
The more I see of death, the more determined I am to live life fully
Friday nights still take me back to sidelines of high school football
Are modern Americans tough enough to survive in united nation?
Can I reconnect with inner child who saw the world differently?
FRIDAY FUNNIES
No, Rodney King, people in this country can’t just ‘all get along’
Best years of our lives? For me, teen years were start of feeling like alien