Tuesday, May 24, 2011

National Retail Federation and Montana Retail Association Air Radio Ads Aimed at Tester Bill to Block Swipe Fee Reform

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The National Retail Federation (NRF) and the Montana Retail Association today announced the launch of a radio advertising campaign urging Senator Jon Tester to rethink his opposition to a new federal law that would save retailers and consumers more than $1 billion a month by lowering “swipe” fees banks charge to process debit card transactions.
 National Retail Federation (NRF)
“Montana retailers don’t understand why Senator Tester has taken the side of Wall Street banks over Main Street businesses and consumers here at home”
“Americans pay the highest swipe fees in the world,” an announcer says in the new radio ads. “Senator Tester knows this. But he’s helping the big banks delay debit card swipe fee reform. Senator Tester says he’s for the consumer, but Tester lets the big banks swipe our money.”
The one-minute ads are running on stations across Montana this week as part of NRF’s nationwide 60-day lobbying, grassroots and media campaign aimed at ensuring that swipe fee reform passed by Congress last year goes into effect as scheduled on July 21. A provision in the 2010 Wall Street reform bill will reduce the fees by an estimated 70 percent, saving about $14 billion a year that retailers plan to pass along to their customers through discounts or other benefits, but the banking industry is spending millions of dollars to delay the reform.
“Congress concluded last year that swipe fees have been driving up prices for consumers by far too much for far too long,” NRF President and CEO Matthew Shay said. “Now that Congress has done something about these fees, retailers are ready to pass the savings along to customers through lower prices and higher value. We want to make sure swipe fee reform takes effect as planned, and consumers get to enjoy those new benefits as soon as possible.”
“Montana retailers don’t understand why Senator Tester has taken the side of Wall Street banks over Main Street businesses and consumers here at home,” Montana Retail Association President Bradley Griffin said. “These fees are driving up prices for Montana citizens at a time when the economy is still recovering. Montana doesn’t want swipe fee reform delayed.”
Tester, a Montana Democrat, introduced legislation in March that would delay implementation of swipe fee reform by two years and require a new government study of the issue. Last week, he said he would modify the bill to seek a 15-month delay, including a six-month study, six months for the Federal Reserve to draft new regulations replacing those proposed in December, and three months to prepare for implementation.
Tester’s call for further study comes despite the fact that Congress held seven hearings and ordered two Government Accountability Office studies before passing reform. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has testified before Congress that he has all the information he needs to prepare final regulations on schedule with no need for delay.
Swipe fees, officially known as interchange fees, are a charge averaging 1-2 percent for debit cards and 2-3 percent for credit cards taken by banks each time a card is used to pay for a purchase. The fees have tripled over the past decade to about $50 billion a year, and drive up prices paid by consumers by an estimated $427 for the average household. Debit cards account for about $20 billion of the total.
Congress has yet to deal with credit card swipe fees but included swipe fee reform for debit cards in last year’s Wall Street bill. Regulations proposed by the Federal Reserve to implement the provision would lower debit card swipe fees from their current level of 1 to 2 percent of each transaction to a flat fee of no more than 12 cents per transaction for large banks that adhere to fee schedules set by the card companies. Banks that set their own rates would be free to charge any fee they believe the market would bear provide that they do so independently. Financial institutions with less than $10 billion in assets are exempt.
As the world's largest retail trade association and the voice of retail worldwide, NRF's global membership includes retailers of all sizes, formats and channels of distribution as well as chain restaurants and industry partners from the United States and more than 45 countries abroad. In the United States, NRF represents the breadth and diversity of an industry with more than 1.6 million American companies that employ nearly 25 million workers and generated 2010 sales of $2.4 trillion. www.nrf.com
Listen to Radio Ad at http://swipefees.nrf.com/ads

Contacts

National Retail Federation
J. Craig Shearman, 202-626-8134
shearmanc@nrf.com
www.nrf.com/swipefees

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