The Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act, signed into law by President Barack Obama in May 2009, was intended āto put strong protections in place for consumers. Unfair rate increases, late-fee traps and bombarding credit card offers on college campuses were key targets of the legislation.ā However, the Federal Reserve Board recently decided that the Act mandates that credit card companies only take individual income into account when deciding when to accept someoneās request for a credit card. This decision was meant to keep college students from going into credit card debt they could not afford to pay off but it also has the consequence of disenfranchising stay-at-home parents, 88% of whom are women.
Anisha Sekar, the chief content manager and credit card analyst for NerdWallet.com said that this would mean that a stay-at-home parent would have to get his or her spouseās co-signature before attaining a credit card. This is despite the fact that a stay-at-home parent is ālikely to make the household’s financial decisions, from paying for groceries to saving for college to dealing with medical bills.ā It also ignores that, as Sekar says, āa stay-at-home mom works just as hard as (or harder than) her spouse-she just doesn’t file her income with the IRS.ā
In response to outcry from womenās rights advocates, the Federal Reserve stated that āthe individual-income provision may be āinconvenient or impractical,ā but that such restrictions are necessary to prevent reckless lending and borrowing.ā The ānecessityā of not allowing stay-at-home parents an equal footing in financial decisions in the household can contribute to the negative psychological effect of ārelying completely on a spouse for such an essential part of adult finances.ā It āalso renders stay-at-home parents financially vulnerable in the case of divorce. If a stay-at-home mom’s spouse is irresponsible, her credit score will fall-and she can’t repair it without her own line of credit.ā
In the worst case scenario, the Federal Reserveās decision will play a role in financial abuse. Financial abuse is a factor in 98% of abusive relationships.Ā Rene Renick of the National Network to End Domestic Violence said āI can’t tell you the number of women who’ve said, āI stayed in the relationship longer than I wanted, or came back, [because] I was afraid I wouldn’t be able to feed my kids,'” says Renick. “[The Fed’s regulations] will limit a woman’s ability to have access to assets on her own.Ā Batterers will more than likely use this to ⦠keep her entrapped in the relationship.ā U.S. Representatives Carolyn B. Maloney and Louise Slaughter said that not only may not having a credit card contribute to oneās abuse, but the ability to attain one independently of oneās spouse could be incredibly important when trying to escape an abusive relationship. They wrote, āWomen trapped in abusive marriages may be unable to work due to a controlling spouseā¦the availability of an independent credit card may represent her best chance at establishing independence and a path out of a dangerous relationship.ā
You can read more about the unfortunate consequences of the Federal Reserveās decision to ban stay-at-home parents from attaining their own credit card here.
Photo from here.