Merchants insist to limit credit, debit fees

December 10, 2009 - 1:36pm | News | Plastic cards |
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Merchants insist to limit credit, debit fees

Merchants, just like consumers, are displeased with the fees they have to pay to credit card companies. Retailers are pressing Congress to limit these fees. But banks and credit card companies are dead set against any such move.
The drop in revenue is bad enough for small strip malls, for example like the Hope's One Stop convenience store run by Carolyn Mooney and her son, but if the customer pays with plastic it hurts even more. That's because merchants pay a set fee plus a percentage on each sale.
But as Mooney's average sale amount goes down, the set fee goes up. As a result, her customers' buying habits are squeezing a bottom line that's already under pressure.
Twenty New Hampshire stores shut down last year, according to the New England Convenience Store Association. Card fees might not be the owners' biggest headache, but an extra $1,000 or $5,000 out the door each year is tough to manage these days.
Controlling the cost of plastic is particularly frustrating because the world of card fees makes the Byzantine Empire look like a meeting of the local PTA.
Jacques Breton, vice president of MJM Associates, is in the business of getting merchants like Mooney to sign contracts to process their credit and debit card charges.
The single biggest cost to merchants is something called the interchange fee, the percentage that is tacked on to each sale.
Two decades ago, there were a handful of interchange rates. Today merchants face about 200, and the percentage changes depending on the sort of plastic the customer uses.
One of the most lucrative for the banks — and most expensive for the merchants — is the rewards card that offers free air miles and other perks. The money for those rewards comes from the merchants through interchange fees.
Breton says the banks push rewards cards heavily: "I've seen financial institutions that had a standard credit card, no bells and whistles, turn around and offer to their good customers rewards cards so as to increase the interchange level — make more money."
Banks and credit card companies point to one independent report that shows the average interchange rate has dropped a bit over the past few years.
Nessa Feddis, senior counsel for the American Bankers Association, says the card business is extremely competitive and merchants like Mooney should take advantage of that.
"There are many service providers out there. Sometimes they can be cheaper, but she should shop around," Feddis says.
According to Feddis, credit and debit cards are convenient and merchants should expect to pay their fair share for providing that service.
The next time you're at the checkout counter, depending on how you feel about the merchant, you might want to ask yourself the quintessential question: Paper or plastic?




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