
1. Regulation of Payday Loans
The financial reform bill will create a powerful consumer advocacy agency, called the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which will write and enforce rules surrounding nearly all consumer loans, including payday loans. Studies have shown that high-cost payday lenders are most prevalent in minority neighborhoods. These so-called "nontraditional" lenders charge exorbitant interest rates -- often as much as 400 percent annually for short-term loans.
According to a recent FDIC report, more than half of all black households (53 percent) use payday lenders, check-cashing companies or pawn brokers instead of banks. In the Latino community, 43 percent of households use such services. Overall, more than 25 percent of all U.S. households of every background use these services.
While we might quibble with the FDIC's numbers, the fact remains that when minorities and others don't have access to traditional forms of credit -- like bank loans or credit cards -- many, unfortunately, turn to payday lenders. Financial reform will curb some of the abuses common among payday lenders and provide badly needed regulation to this industry.
2. Oversight of Check-Cashing Businesses
Under the financial reform bill, check-cashing outfits will also be regulated. One goal of financial reform is to help bring un-banked or under-banked households into the financial mainstream, and make sure un-banked consumers are not subjected to inordinately high fees or unfair terms when they use nontraditional financial services and products.
3. Reform of Mortgage Lending
In the aftermath of the housing boom, the Federal Reserve found that African Americans -- especially black women -- were two to three times more likely to be steered into costly subprime mortgages, even when they had good credit. When these consumers tried to get out of high-rate loans, they often couldn't because the loans had balloon payments or were packed with expensive prepayment penalties.
Such abuses are being rooted out in a number of ways in the financial reform bill. For one thing, depending on the type of mortgage, prepayment penalties will be either banned or limited. Additionally, the new law says that fees for mortgages generally shouldn't exceed 3 percent of the loan amount. Lastly, regulators will be cracking down on "affinity" fraud in the home loan business and in the loan arena in general.
All financial fraud is illegal, of course. But affinity fraud is being specifically targeted under financial reform. Affinity fraud occurs when someone who shares your ethic background, or who belongs to the same social or religious group, is able to financially con you because of a built-in trust factor. Affinity fraud happens among all groups: African Americans, Latinos, Asians, whites, and so on.
4. Special Services for Members of the Military
Financial reform mandates the creation of an Office of Financial Literacy to teach all Americans how to be better stewards of their money. Additionally, the legislation will create a separate federal office just to provide special financial education and assistance to members of the military and their families.
"Because members of the military are not that well paid, that makes them a lightning rod for companies that want to make money off them," says Linda Sherry, a spokeswoman for Consumer Action. "So there's no denying that this group has a very discrete and important need to be protected from predatory financial services," she said, noting that payday lenders, in particular, can often be found "hanging around the gates" near military bases.
Whatever additional protections emerge in this area will be important for African Americans and other minorities, who currently make up 40 percent of the nation's armed forces. There's an old saying that when white America catches a cold, black America catches the flu.
If that's the case, then this massive financial reform bill will be a tonic to some of the financial ills that ail mainstream America -- and should be a booster shot to African Americans and other minorities, too.
Lynnette Khalfani-Cox, an award-winning financial news journalist and former Wall Street Journal reporter for CNBC, has been featured in the Washington Post, USA Today, and the New York Times, as well as magazines ranging from Essence and Redbook to Black Enterprise and Smart Money. Check out her New York Times best seller 'Zero Debt: The Ultimate Guide to Financial Freedom.'

Comments: (1)
Add a comment
By: Marvice on 7/25/2010 3:19AM
There are no banks that offer the type of loans a pay day loan place makes. I see no difference in the bank charging you a $39.00 over draft charge and a pay day loan place charging you a fee for a borrowed amount. Sometimes it is so evident that if the banks aren't making money off something they try to make the other institution into the enemy. What is wrong is the ones that charge an enormous amount of interest over 20 and up to 99 percent. That is where the crack down needs to be done.
Reply to this Comment | Report This