4.8 • 1.5K Ratings
🗓️ 7 December 2021
⏱️ 57 minutes
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0:00.0 | This week, we're re-broadcasting an episode that we originally aired in February 2020 with |
0:05.5 | Banking Law expert Mercer Barataran and Economic Mobility expert Kate Blackford about the |
0:11.6 | hitting costs of Banking Well Poor. Whether it's the astronomical interest rates of a payday |
0:17.4 | loan or the costs that come with being unbanked, Banking Well Poor is extremely expensive, |
0:24.1 | but there are steps to reign in the people who profit from it. |
0:27.8 | For example, under mounting pressure from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, |
0:32.4 | Capital One recently ended overdraft fees, making them the largest bank to do so. |
0:38.2 | Overdraft fees are one of the most pernicious examples of the vampire economy, in which |
0:43.0 | financial institutions drain the accounts of the poor by weighing them down with relatively |
0:49.0 | small fees and high interest rates. Hopefully, Capital One's example will put pressure |
0:55.2 | on other big banks to end overdraft fees and other exploitive policies that prey on the poor. |
1:02.4 | Predatory lending practices target the members of our community who have the fewest resources. |
1:08.7 | And the problem is it's a death spiral for people, but it's an increasing returns phenomenon |
1:13.6 | for the practitioners. It got worse in tandem with neoliberalism and deregulation of the banking |
1:19.6 | sector. Keeping the poor poor is a great business strategy for people like payday lenders, |
1:25.4 | but it's terrible for people and for economic growth. |
1:34.4 | From the home offices of civic ventures in downtown Seattle, this is pitchfork economics, |
1:39.5 | with Nick Hanauer, the best place to get the truth about who gets what and why. |
1:50.1 | I'm Nick Hanauer, founder of civic ventures. I'm Stephanie Urban. I run a lot of our advocacy and |
1:56.5 | campaign work here at civic ventures. You know, Nick, I think we spend a lot of time talking about |
2:04.4 | and thinking about the ways that wealth compounds and accumulates and power thusly also compounds |
2:10.6 | and accumulates because I think given your history and frankly the backgrounds of many folks in |
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