To download: English | Deutsch | Français | Italiano | Português | Español | Hrvatski | Slovenšcina | Lietuvos
For today’s consumers, consumer credit contracts now rank as high in importance as contracts for employment. But overindebtedness has also become a similar threat in modern times to unemployment in the last century. Sustainable development therefore requires access to responsible credit products and services.
At the present time many consumer credit agreements are far from transparent, and involve terms and conditions that are at best confusing and at worst, deliberately misleading to consumers. These agreements often involve multiple firms, and anticipate that consumers will pay additional fees for unforeseen contingencies; many also require the purchase of linked services such as insurance of unpaid balances. The consequences for consumers who are unwilling or unable to pay attention to these details can be devastating.
Consumer Credit makes potential future income available for current spending on items such as consumption, education, starting a business, and paying for health care. As such, consumer credit is a basic element of participation in the economic life of modern society. The benefits of access to credit are many, including developing national wealth and meeting basic consumer needs. However, there can also be a dark side to consumer credit — in some cases, it can destroy families, and lead to the loss of valuable assets including homes. The continued extension of credit at high cost to people on inadequate incomes only serves to deepen the levels of poverty that they experience.
In Europe, most consumer credit is provided by private-sector firms. If their activities are not tempered by moral institutions, public awareness, protective law and administrative supervision, firms might irresponsibly provide credit in the sole interest of gaining maximum profit. Borrowed money does not itself provide real wealth but only holds the potential to create that wealth. Vulnerable people can be harmed by greed, usury, exploitation and predatory lending, all leading to a lifelong entanglement in debt. This insight has become an integral part of the European legal tradition which bans usury, laesio enormis, extortionate credit, and the exploitation of need; this tradition goes on to require social responsibility and the exemption from seizure for some property and income.
Consumer credit is part of a cultural process of reproduction. Left unimpeded, market forces in the financial services sector tend to favour the rich and to discriminate against the poor. Trust in the “invisible hand” has never safeguarded the interests of the disadvantaged, — not with regard to poor countries and not with regard to poor people. Credit markets need rules that allow the benefits of credit provision to flow to all people and not just to the more fortunate, whilst rules are also required to protect those who are most vulnerable to exploitative lending practices. This balance, between providing access to credit whilst preventing the worst excesses of an unbridled market, is central to the concept of ‘responsible credit’.
The EU, in article 152 of the Maastricht treaty as well as in the proposed new constitution, acknowledges that the State must guarantee a high level of consumer protection and must actively oppose social discrimination. If the EU comes to see its primary goal as opening markets for the most influential (and sometimes also the most unscrupulous) lenders, without respect for national culture in credit regulation and morality, it will be seen as a threat to the idea of a unified Europe. Europe needs banking for, and not against, its people. Law and justice must therefore create a credit market that promotes the productive use of credit, including a consideration of social needs.
The current draft of the EU Consumer Credit Directive, which differs from previous versions, threatens consumers by allowing the sale, in all Member States, of financial services that will exploit the disadvantaged. The Directive includes virtually no consumer protections nor guarantees existing national protections, whilst it opens up the existing markets of all Member states to competition from lenders based in other countries. For this reason, the wider market for financial services threatens to undermine existing consumer protection laws in many Member States.
In order to uphold cultural diversity, to further social responsibility and “good morals,” and to keep up the bona fide principle of ius commune, the following requirements for a responsible European Consumer Credit Directive can be identified. The new proposal of a Consumer Credit Directive has been evaluated in the light of these principles. This evaluation shows that, at a minimum, the European Commission wants to apply significantly different principles to the European credit culture that have been in place thus far and we consider that to do so would be to the disadvantage of many consumers.
Created: 04/06/07. Last changed: 19/03/14.
Information concerning property and copy right of the content will be given by the Institut For Financial Services (IFF) on demand. A lack of explicit information on this web site does not imply any right for free usage of any content.