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Payday Lending Bill Would Shrink Lenders Interest Rate Cap

Taber Andrew Bain/Flickr

A bill lowering payday loan interest rates is again up for consideration in the Indiana Senate.

The bill would put a 36 percent cap on what a lender can charge. The current cap is 391 percent.

If passed, fees charged to users would shrink by more than 90 percent. Several states have passed similar laws and in 2006, then-President George W. Bush enacted a 36 percent cap that applies to active-duty military members.

Indiana Institute for Working Families senior policy analyst Erin Macey says a poll conducted by Bellwether Research and Consulting suggests most Hoosiers support the change.

“I think most people recognize that this is a model that is built on lending to people that cannot afford to pay it back at exorbitant rates,” she says.

But Barnes and Thornburg lawyer Brian Burdick told the Senate Insurance and Financial Institutions Committee his client – payday lender Check Into Cash – believes enacting such laws has meant more danger for consumers in states that have them.

“In fact in those communities, they went to the online lenders, the tribal lenders, the guy out in the parking lot who if you don’t pay breaks your kneecaps, I guess,” says Burdick.

After about three hours of testimony, the committee tabled a vote on the bill.  

Samantha Horton is the All Things Considered newscaster and a reporter at WFYI. She is a graduate from University of Evansville with a bachelor’s degree in international studies, political science and communication where she also swam all four years. Samantha has worked as a reporter at WNIN in Evansville, Side Effects Public Media, Indiana Public Broadcasting and the Kansas News Service. In 2022 she was one of two fellows with the NPR Midwest Newsroom and Missouri Independent investigating elevated blood lead levels in children.
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