Michigan Joins 21 Other States Against Easing of Usury Laws

Attempts by “predatory lenders” to charge unconscionable interest rates on their loans has drawn fire from Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and her colleagues in 21 other states across the nation following word of a proposal from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

That proposal would exempt entities that are not national banks, including payday and other high-cost lenders from state usury laws. Usury laws prevent predatory lenders from taking advantage of consumers by limiting the interest rates that can be charged on loans.

If finalized, the OCC’s proposed regulations would enable predatory lenders to circumvent these caps through “rent-a-bank” schemes, in which banks act as lenders in name only, passing along their state law exemptions to non-bank payday lenders. Such arrangements would allow lenders to charge consumers rates that far exceed the rates permissible under state usury laws.

Nessel says today, “My office has a responsibility to act when Michiganders are at risk of deceitful and abusive loan practices,” adding, “If the OCC succeeds, more consumers risk becoming victims of predatory and misleading tactics by payday lenders, and that’s more than enough reason for my colleagues and I to oppose this proposal.”

State law continues to protect residents from predatory lending by non-banks such as payday, auto title, and installment lenders. Congress affirmed that role with the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, preserving more protective state laws. The new regulations proposed by the OCC would extend the National Bank Act exemption for federally-regulated banks to non-bank debt buyers, such as payday lenders. The proposed rule is a sharp reversal in policy and a deliberate attempt to evade state laws that target predatory lending.

The Attorneys General argue that the OCC’s attempt to extend the National Bank Act preemption to non-banks conflicts with the National Bank Act and Dodd-Frank Act, exceeds the OCC’s statutory authority, and violates the Administrative Procedure Act.

Nessel joins the Attorneys General of California, Colorado, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin in submitting the letter.

You can read the full letter by clicking this link:

Multistate-OCC-Letter-on-Predatory-Lending

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