April 22, 2022
The National Retail Federation is calling on Visa and Mastercard to cancel credit card swipe increases due to take effect this month.
The industry group is joining bipartisan lawmakers who wrote a letter in support of the fee withdrawal, according to a press release.
"American consumers are struggling under the worst inflation in four decades and these increases would only make the situation worse," NRF Vice President for Government Relations, Banking and Financial Services Leon Buck said in the release. "Swipe fees are a percentage of the transaction, so banks and card networks are already receiving an unearned windfall as they piggyback on higher prices. They're going to see billions of dollars more in revenue this year even if rates stay the same, so an increase would only add insult to injury."
"Senators and representatives from both sides of the aisle coming together to address this issue shows that Congress recognizes the impact these fees are having on the small businesses and consumers they represent," Buck said. "These fees drive up prices for consumers and affect shoppers in every congressional district and state in the country. We stand with lawmakers who are willing to take the side of Main Street over Wall Street."
Senators Roger Marshall, R-Kan., and Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., and Representatives Beth Van Duyne, R-Texas, and Peter Welch, D-Vt., sent a letter to Visa and Mastercard asking they withdraw plans to implement a package of swipe fee increases. The estimated $1.2 billion in increases were scheduled to take effect in April 2021 but were postponed by a year after Durbin and Welch said they were ill-timed as the economy was struggling to recover from the pandemic.
"As Americans are dealing with the highest rate of inflation in decades, your profits are already high enough and any further fee increase is simply taking advantage of vulnerable Americans," the letter said. "Raising your interchange fee rates even higher will undoubtedly increase the already high costs consumers are facing and add to inflationary pressure, which is the last thing American families deserve right now."
Visa, Mastercard and the banks that issue their cards charged retailers $77.5 billion in credit card swipe fees last year and $28.1 billion in debit card swipe fees, according to the letter.
Swipe fees for all types and brands of cards totaled $137.8 billion in 2021, more than double the amount 10 years earlier, according to a Nilson Report. Swipe fees, which average 2.22% of the transaction amount for Visa and Mastercard credit cards, are most merchants' highest operating cost after labor. The fees drive up consumer prices, amounting to more than $700 a year for the average American family, according to the release.