Post from Dave Harding's Blog:
Payday Lenders: Profiting From The Booming "Poverty Business"

As more companies view low-income Americans as opportunities for profit, the "poverty business" is booming.

BILL MOYERS JOURNAL and EXPOSÉ: AMERICA'S INVESTIGATIVE REPORTS follow a team of BUSINESSWEEK reporters as they track new corporate practices that some say exploit the working poor.

BUSINESSWEEK's coverage of the burgeoning poverty industry goes beyond the currently much debated practices of the sub-prime mortgage industry to other credit providers — for auto, consumer goods, and even student loans.

A second part of the investigation delves into the way that a "growing number of hospitals, working with a range of financial companies, are squeezing revenue from patients with little or no health insurance."

Read the original BUSINESSWEEK coverage:

Watch the entire show and read the transcript online


Reader Comments
  
Morally Reprehensible
By Free Fallin Aug 11th 2008 at 3:07 pm EDT
It should be morally reprehensible to most people that any business is out to make money off of those who are in poverty. It is sickening that the payday lending industry is set to spend millions of dollars to maintain the status quo in Ohio, where there poverty business is thriving.

"Kim Norris, a spokeswoman for the payday lending group, declined to disclose the ad's costs or target markets, and would not say how much the group will shell out for the entire campaign." (Columbus Business First). Heaven forbid the payday lending lobby actually comes clean about how much money they are pouring into our state to convince voters that they really need 391% interest.

If you were in the poverty business, how would you sleep at night? Cot, mattress and comforter, or African-Mahogany sleigh bed?
  
Moyers program...
By Reallib Aug 11th 2008 at 4:30 pm EDT
Last week, I was on one of our State University campuses, where I was accosted by someone who was soliciting signatures for a state referendum. He claimed it was to put before the voters a new "freedom in lending" bill before Ohio voters. When I looked at the petition, it said just the opposite. It seems that the lending industry in Ohio is trying to overturn the law that Strickland just signed lowering the maximum interest rate to "only" 28%. They're going about this with the usual innocuous sounding group connected somehow to "Freedom". If I hadn't taken the time to read the petition, I'd have helped pave the way to this nonsense. It looked like he had over two pages of signatures from people who apparently hadn't read what they were signing. Sound familiar?
  



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