Innovation in Banking Could Help or Hurt
Innovation in Banking Could Help or Hurt
There is speculation in the financial technology (fintech) industry that the deregulatory atmosphere embraced by the incoming Trump administration will allow for an upswell of innovative new products. But will innovation in banking be a curse or a boon for the underbanked among us, who both stand to gain from new products and yet have the most to lose?With Republicans in control of both houses of Congress and the Presidency, it's practically a certainty that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), championed by liberal icon Elizabeth Warren, will be gutted, left to die, and given a sky burial that feeds the circling vultures. The CFPB is the organization that brought us regulations against the payday lending industry. Short term loans can be a godsend for the desperate, but high interest rates often lock them into rolling loans over when they can't be repaid at the end of the term, causing the amount owed to soar. How is being trapped by debt any kind of help for people with little money to begin with? Perhaps ironically, and certainly sadly, the less money you have, the more you must often pay for needed products and services.
Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts has long stood against abuses by the banking and financial industries. Public domain photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Sources:
Could Bad News Be Good News For The Underbanked?
Innovators are killing us: Instead of reinventing housing or transit, they bring us companies like Airbnb and Uber
Are Cellphones Really Changing the World?
Beyond money: living without the illusion of independence
Payday Lending: Will Anything Better Replace It?
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.