Report: Banks coy on fee schedules

Published: March. 2, 2008 at 9:50 PM

WASHINGTON, March 2 (UPI) -- Many U.S. banks ignore federal regulations requiring that customers get information about fees and interest rates on their accounts, a federal report says.

The Government Accountability Office report is to be released Monday, The Washington Post reported.

The report is based on an investigation that used undercover staffers. They found that 20 percent of the 184 branch banks they visited did not provide lists of fees and interest rates, and half the 154 financial institutions did not give the details on their Web sites.

Eric Halperin, director of the Center for Responsible Lending, said banks have turned overdraft and other fees into a revenue source. One method is to cover debit card transactions when customers do not have the money in their accounts and then charge for the service.

"Most people think their debit card is a safe way to do transactions because it's not like your credit card -- you can't spend money you don't have," he said. "But actually, banks have turned that on their head and are turning people's debit cards into credit cards with interest rates that are astronomical."

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints




Additional News Stories
More than half of U.S. lakes rated good (9 min)
Poll: Young adults want healthcare reform (23 min)
California updates tsunami maps (36 min)
UPI NewsTrack Business (44 min)
Ethics list puts whistle-blower first (45 min)
Filberts recalled for salmonella risk (58 min)
Average Canadian household spending $71K
fark
No, the local Kinko's is not going to print those naked pictures of young children for you
150 battle blaze at chicken farm. Fowl play suspected
Friday Photo Fun with the folks from TSG: Match the "Santa Con" with their crime for shot at best...
Yet another group of researchers claim to have discovered the lost city of Atlantis. This time,...
Photoshop theme: Cthulhu vs. the Flying Spaghetti Monster
Al Qaeda blasts away its 'glass ceiling' by officially clearing women to become suicide bombers