Consumer Protection Legislation Clears First Hurdle
For Immediate Release: | Contact: | Kristin Oberlander
(202) 466-2100 [email protected]
Twitter: koberlander |
Consumer Protection Legislation Clears First Hurdle
House Committee Passes Key Component to President Obama’s Financial Regulatory Reform Effort
Washington, D.C., October 22, 2009 -- The
Consumer Financial Protection Agency Act of 2009 (H.R. 3126), which
includes the creation of a new federal agency central to President
Obama’s financial regulatory reform initiative, was approved by the House Financial Services Committee today.
In reaction to the housing crisis and the collapse of our financial
markets, the bill creates the Consumer Financial Protection Agency
(CFPA) to protect consumers from risky and deceptive practices in the
financial marketplace, while also protecting our country from another
economic debacle. The CFPA would oversee and regulate consumer
financial products such as credit cards and mortgages.
According to NASE’s November 2008 Housing & Economic Survey,
49 percent of the self-employed used various forms of personal
financing (mortgage, home equity, credit card, etc.) to start their
businesses. Credit card debt accounted for 28 percent of this total
debt. Close to 70 percent of survey respondents indicated that they
used various forms of debt (mortgage, home equity, credit card, etc.)
to obtain additional cash for their business operations, of which 39
percent was credit card debt.
Micro-businesses and the self-employed have been hit particularly hard
during this financial crisis. Their reliance on credit cards, lines of
credit and home equity loans to help with the daily operating costs of
their business has left the self-employed vulnerable to unpleasant
industry practices. Furthermore, due to slow sales and a cash flow
crunch resulting from the credit freeze and plummeting home values,
some micro-business owners have been forced to close their doors.
“During the financial crisis, business definitely declined for our
transmission shop. We had used credit cards to pay bills. Our credit
card company cancelled these lines of credit; my husband and I each had
a card. Once our lease was up we had to sell our business to our
landlord at a huge loss,” commented NASE Member Jere Smith, owner of Lancelot Inc. in Liberty, Mo.
The National Association for the Self-Employed supports creating a
transparent and fair financial marketplace with increased consumer
protections and consumer education. While NASE Members support efforts
to improve financial regulatory reform, the micro-business community
wants assurances that small business will have a voice in the
regulatory process of the new Consumer Financial Protection Agency, as
well as existing regulatory agencies. Regulators must be mindful that
new rules do not have the unintended consequence of restricting credit
further, or making it more costly for micro-businesses to access
financing options.
“Our nations’ smallest businesses have seen the value of their home
drop, their retirement savings shrink and their access to credit
freeze. Furthermore, they have seen their tax dollars go to shore up
the same big institutions that created this financial mess. They want
assurances that our government regulators won’t be caught sleeping on
the job again,” commented Kristie Arslan, executive director of the
NASE.
About the NASE
The National Association for the Self-Employed (NASE) is the nation's
leading resource for the self-employed and micro-businesses, bringing a
broad range of benefits to help entrepreneurs succeed and to drive the
continued growth of this vital segment of the American economy. The
NASE is a 501(c) (6) nonprofit organization and provides big-business
advantages to hundreds of thousands of micro-businesses across the
United States. For more information, visit the association's Web site
at www.NASE.org. |