First-Ever Study of Credit Counseling Finds High Fees, Bad Advice and Other Abuses by New Breed of "Non-Profit" Agencies
--Credit Card Company Practices Have Helped Create Counseling Crisis--
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 9, 2003
Deanne Loonin, NCLC, 617-542-8010
Travis Plunkett, CFA, 202-387-6121
Washington D.C. - As more Americans seek assistance for serious debt
problems, the National Consumer Law Center (NCLC) and Consumer
Federation of America (CFA) today unveiled Credit Counseling in Crisis,
a report detailing the severe threat to consumers from a new generation
of credit-counseling agencies. The comprehensive study found that,
unlike the previous generation of mostly creditor-funded counseling
services, these new agencies often harm debtors with improper advice,
deceptive practices, excessive fees and abuse of their non-profit
status. An estimated nine million Americans have some contact with a
consumer credit counseling agency each year.
The report also concluded that creditor practices and funding
reductions have caused agencies to cut back on educational services and
have led more consumers to drop out of counseling and declare
bankruptcy. Another key finding was that poor oversight of credit
counseling agencies by the Internal Revenue Service and the states has
allowed unscrupulous counseling agencies to grow and prosper.
"The findings of this report show that the credit counseling industry
has undergone an alarming transformation in the last decade," said
Deanne Loonin, Staff Attorney for the NCLC. "Aggressive firms
masquerading as 'non-profit organizations' are gouging consumers.
Deceptive practices and outright scams are on the rise," she said.
"More consumers are getting bad advice and access to fewer real
counseling options. Meanwhile, most state and federal regulators appear
to be asleep at the switch."
Major Problems With Credit Counseling
Not all of the new credit counseling agencies are a threat to
consumers. Some are above-board and have pioneered consumer-friendly
practices, such as flexible hours, electronic payments and easy access
by phone and by Internet. However, as the new generation of credit
counseling agencies has gained market share, consumer complaints have
risen sharply. The Better Business Bureau reported in 2002 that
complaints about credit counseling agencies nationwide had increased to
1,480, up from 261 in 1998. Three types of problems are adversely
affecting consumers:
- Deceptive and Misleading Practices. Complaints and government investigations have focused on agencies that do not make consumers' payments on time, that deceptively claim that fees are voluntary, and that do not adequately disclose fees to potential clients. The last two charges are among those cited by the State of Illinois in its lawsuit against AmeriDebt. Inc.
- Excessive Costs. In an industry that rarely charged for counseling and other services a decade ago, most agencies now charge fees to set up a Debt Management Program (a debt consolidation plan known as a "DMP") and to maintain it on a monthly basis. Some agencies charge as much as a full month's consolidated payment-usually hundreds of dollars-simply to establish an account.
- Abuse of Non-Profit Status. Some "non-profit" credit counseling agencies are increasingly performing like profit-making enterprises. Nearly every agency in the industry has non-profit, tax-exempt status. Nevertheless, some of these agencies function as virtual for-profit businesses, aggressively advertising and selling DMPs and a range of related services, maintaining close ties to for-profit firms, reaping high revenues and paying their executives salaries that are much higher than average for the non-profit sector. A survey of Internal Revenue Service (IRS) tax reports on non-profit organizations found numerous examples of lavish executive compensation and apparent windfall revenues. For example, American Consumer Credit Counseling reported paying its president in 2000 a salary of $462,350 plus just over $130,000 in benefits. In that same year, Cambridge Credit Counseling reported a net financial gain of about $7.3 million. In short, some agencies may be in violation of IRS rules governing eligibility for tax-exempt status. Credit counseling organizations should not qualify as non-profit corporations under IRS rules if they are organized or operated to benefit individuals associated with the corporation or if they are not operated exclusively to accomplish charitable or educational purposes.
- No Options Other Than Debt Consolidation. Traditional credit counseling agencies offered a range of services, including financial and budget counseling and community education, as well as DMPs. Newer agencies, in contrast, often funnel consumers only into DMPs, even if they will not benefit. Educational options, such as debt counseling, are disappearing fast.
Creditor Practices Are at the Root of Several Key Problems
Major banks have continued cutting funding to credit counseling
agencies, a trend that started in the mid-1990s. Credit card issuers
historically paid agencies 15 percent of the debt they recovered from
borrowers in DMPs. By 2002, however, one credit counseling trade
association (the National Foundation for Credit Counseling) was
reporting an average contribution of just 8 percent. More recent data
collected for this report indicates that creditors often contribute
less than 8 percent, but on a sliding scale, depending on the ability
of individual agencies to meet a range of requirements. (See attachment
A.) As available revenue has declined, most agencies have curtailed the
range of services they offer and have increased the fees they charge to
consumers.
Most creditors are also becoming increasingly unwilling to reduce
interest rates for consumers who enter debt management programs. In the
last four years, five of 13 major credit card issuers have increased
the interest rate they offer to consumers in DMPs (Bank One/First USA,
Discover, Chase Manhattan, Fleet and Wells Fargo). Only two creditors,
Providian and Capital One, have lowered rates during the same period,
which still leaves Capital One's interest rate at a very high 15.9
percent. Sears, which generally charges interest rates above 20
percent, continues to refuse to negotiate any discount. Bank of
America, on the other hand, will completely eliminate interest for
consumers in a DMP. Other creditors that charge relatively low rates
are Chase Manhattan, at 7 percent, and Providian, at 8 percent. (See
attachment B.)
The increasing refusal of creditors to offer significantly lower
interest rates causes more consumers to drop out of credit counseling
and to declare bankruptcy. According to a survey by VISA USA, one-third
of consumers who failed to complete a DMP said they would have stayed
on if creditors had further lowered interest rates or waived fees.
Moreover, almost half of those who dropped off a DMP had or were going
to declare bankruptcy.
"By slashing agency funding and charging credit counseling consumers
interest rates that are too high, credit card companies are leaving
debt-choked Americans with few options other than bankruptcy," said
Travis B. Plunkett, the Legislative Director of CFA. "It is
hypocritical for the credit card industry to demand that Congress give
them relief by enacting the bankruptcy bill, while closing off credit
counseling as an effective alternative to bankruptcy for many
consumers."
Creditors have recently made some efforts to stop the trend toward
low-quality, high-cost counseling "mills." For example, MBNA will not
fund an agency at all unless it meets requirements related to its
accreditation status, its financial practices and the amount of fees
consumers are charged. However, each creditor applies different
requirements to counseling agencies. This has significantly increased
the administrative burdens on and costs to agencies.
Bankruptcy Bill and State Laws Could Expose Consumers to Unscrupulous Counselors
Just over 1.5 million Americans declared personal bankruptcy in 2002.
Credit counseling mandates proposed in federal bankruptcy legislation
(H.R. 975) - and already a part of some state laws - could increase the
number of consumers who are served by disreputable credit counselors.
The bankruptcy bill would require debtors to receive a credit
counseling briefing before filing for personal bankruptcy and to
complete a counseling course before being discharged. Although the
legislation seeks to insure that agencies meet certain standards of
quality, it does not authorize funds to investigate these agencies,
their fees, practices or success rates. This will make it harder to
prevent shady operators from getting placed on the list of approved
agencies maintained by bankruptcy courts and trustees, and to ensure
ongoing compliance.
Public Policy Recommendations
1. The Internal Revenue Service should aggressively enforce existing
standards for non-profit credit counseling organizations. The IRS
should also use its power to impose "intermediate sanctions" when
agencies pay unreasonable or excessive compensation to individuals
associated with them.
2. Congress and the states should enact laws that would directly
address abuses by credit counseling agencies. Among other provisions,
the law should:
- Prohibit false or misleading advertising and referral fees.
- Require credit counseling agencies to better inform consumers about fees, the sources of agency funding, the unsuitability of DMPs for many consumers, and other options that consumers should consider, such as bankruptcy.
- Prohibit agencies from receiving a fee for service from a consumer until all of that person's creditors have approved a DMP.
- Give consumers three days to cancel an agreement with a credit counseling agency without obligation.
- Cap fees charged by agencies at $50 for enrollment or set-up. Allow only reasonable monthly charges.
- Require agencies to prominently disclose all financial arrangements with lenders or financial service providers.
- Provide consumers with the right to enforce the law in court.
3. Credit counseling trade associations should set strong, public "best
practice standards" and provide for vigorous, independent enforcement
of these standards. They should also require that all of their members
publicly disclose statistics on the number of consumers who fail to
complete debt management programs. Trade associations and individual
agencies should work to diversify agency funding and decrease agency
reliance on creditor funding. This will improve the financial stability
of these agencies and decrease the potential conflicts-of-interest that
currently exist.
4. Creditors should increase financial support to credit counseling
agencies, especially to improve credit counseling options for consumers
who are unlikely to benefit from DMPs. Creditors should also reverse
the trend of reducing the concessions they offer to consumers who enter
DMPs, and immediately stop funding and doing business with agencies
that charge high fees, function as virtual for-profit organizations, or
employ deceptive or misleading practices.
Advice for Consumers
The report advised consumers to evaluate all of their options before
entering credit counseling, including developing a better spending and
savings plan, negotiating individually with their creditors and-in very
serious situations-declaring bankruptcy. The groups also strongly
recommended that consumers shop around for a good credit counseling
agency.
"It is virtually impossible to distinguish the honest, caring agencies
from the rip-off artists by just looking at a TV ad or making a quick
phone call," said Plunkett. "Don't just respond to television or
Internet ads. Get referrals from friends or family, find out which
agencies have had complaints lodged against them and look at several
agencies closely before making a decision."
The report offered consumers a number of tips on how to find quality
credit counseling. It also cited seven "red flags" -- reasons to reject
an agency and to look elsewhere for assistance:
1. High Fees. In general, if the set-up fee for a
debt management plan (also known as debt consolidation) is more than
$50 and monthly fees are more than $25, look for a better deal.
Similarly, if the agency is vague or reluctant to talk about specific
fees, go elsewhere.
2. "Voluntary" Fees that Aren't So Voluntary.
Some agencies publicly claim that their fees are voluntary, but don't
pass this information on to consumers. Others will tell you that their
fees are voluntary, but will put a lot of pressure on you to pay the
full fee, even if you can't afford it. Ask all agencies you contact if
their fees are voluntary. If the full fee is too much, do not pay the
agency more than you can afford.
3. The Hard Sell. If the person at the other end
of the line is reading from a script and aggressively pushing debt
"savings" or the possibility of a future "consolidation" loan, hang up.
4. Employees Paid by Commission. Most credit
counseling agencies are non-profit organizations that are supposed to
consider your best interests when offering you counseling options.
Employees that receive commissions for placing consumers in debt
management plans are more likely to be focusing on their own wallets
than yours.
5. They Flunk the "Twenty Minute" Test. Any
agency that offers you a debt management plan in less than twenty
minutes hasn't spent enough time looking at your finances. An effective
counseling session, whether on the phone or in-person, takes a
significant amount of time, generally thirty to ninety minutes.
6. One Size Fits All. Some agencies are like a
shoe store that sells just one type of shoe. The only choice they will
offer you is a debt management plan. The agency should talk to you
about whether a debt management plan is appropriate for you rather than
assume that it is. If the agency doesn't offer any educational options,
such as classes or budget counseling, consider one that does.
7. Aggressive Ads. Many agencies that advertise
treat consumers fairly. However, some are being investigated or sued
for deceptive practices. Many others charge unreasonable fees or offer
no real counseling. Don't just respond to television and Internet
advertising, or telemarketing calls. Get referrals from friends or
family, find out which agencies have been subject to complaints and
talk to a number of agencies before making a decision.
National Consumer Law Center is a non-profit organization
specializing in consumer issues on behalf of low-income consumers. NCLC
works with thousands of legal services, government and private
attorneys, as well as community groups and organizations that represent
low-income and elderly individuals on consumer issues.
Consumer Federation of America (CFA) is a non-profit association of
almost 300 pro-consumer groups, with a combined membership of 50
million, which was founded in 1968 to advance the consumer interest
through advocacy and education.
A copy of the report can be found at: http://www.consumerfed.org/pdfs/credit_counseling_report.pdf.