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Despite the fact that I benefit from rewards cards, they are not primarily intended to benefit the consumer. Reining them in a little bit is IMO a good idea.
Despite the fact that I benefit from rewards cards, they are not primarily intended to benefit the consumer. Reining them in a little bit is IMO a good idea.
… but they are intended to benefit the credit card issuers and sponsors (e.g., Hilton) and have the side effect of benefiting the economy by stimulating spending. Reining in rewards cards would thereby hurt the issuers, sponsors, and the economy, which would make it a bad thing. IMHO we shouldn’t be doing anything to hurt the economy!
Despite the fact that I benefit from rewards cards, they are not primarily intended to benefit the consumer. Reining them in a little bit is IMO a good idea.
Canada has significantly capped interchange/swipe costs of CCs & hence the reward cards have significantly gone down there.....
I understand that many people use CCs irresponsibly/foolishly (just like they use the BNPL programs now foolishly or crypto & the like over time) but hate to see those of us who DO use our CC responsibly lose all the excellent benefits due to some/many people using their CCs irresponsibly...
Hope we will not go to the Canadian model (which would take away most of the awesome CC related benefits many of us have had the privilege of enjoying)..
Just like fire or TSs, if one uses CCs responsibly, they are amazing!
'Canada has significantly capped credit card costs for businesses through a new agreement with Visa and Mastercard that lowers interchange fees for small businesses, and by allowing merchants to add a surcharge of up to 2.4% to cover their costs. While these changes don't cap all credit card costs, they do provide relief for merchants and allow them to pass some of the costs onto consumers at a regulated rate, notes Canada.ca and CBC.
Fee reductions for small businesses
Lower interchange fees: Canada has finalized agreements with Visa and Mastercard to lower interchange fees for small businesses, which are the fees that merchants pay to credit card companies for each transaction.
Significant savings: The government announced that these reductions are expected to result in approximately $1 billion in savings for small businesses over five years.
Specific cap for some businesses: The new agreements also include a cap of 0.95% for eligible businesses, according to CBC.
Surcharging rules
Cap on surcharges: Merchants can now charge consumers a surcharge of up to 2.4% per transaction to cover their credit card processing costs, as detailed on Canada.ca and by CBC.
Surcharge cannot exceed the merchant's cost: The surcharge cannot be higher than the actual cost the merchant pays to accept the card, according to the Canadian Federation of Independent Business.
Transparency requirements: Merchants must clearly display the surcharge at the point of sale and on their receipts, as outlined on Canada.ca.
Consumer choice: Consumers who prefer to avoid the surcharge can choose to pay with a different method, such as cash or debit.
Important note on Quebec
Exceptions in Quebec: These new surcharging rules do not apply in Quebec, where credit card surcharges are forbidden under the province's Consumer Protection Act, according to Radio-Canada.
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