A so-called “consumer protection” agency became a case study in regulatory excess and misplaced praise.
A so-called “consumer protection” agency became a case study in regulatory excess and misplaced praise.
This guest commentary was written by Ed Harris, CEO of Harris Northwest Advisors and a Visiting Contributor at the Southwest Public Policy Institute. In his argument about APR, Patrick Brenner is wrong but inadvertently correct on a larger point he doesn’t address. An APR calculation is mathematically accurate. Most fixed-rate 30-year mortgages are priced similarly, […]
Good intentions don’t pay the bills. But choice, transparency, and access can.
Why banks, payment networks, merchant servicers, and financial firms will face a harder four years, and what to do about it.
The veto of Alaska’s SB 39 preserves critical credit access for underserved consumers and rejects the failed model of rate caps seen in New Mexico and Illinois.
The CFPB’s outdated rule on small-dollar lending punishes working-class Americans by restricting access to the very credit they rely on to make ends meet.
Acting CFPB Director Russ Vought’s rollback of state enforcement overreach marks a critical return to legal restraint, restoring constitutional balance and regulatory clarity to America’s financial system.
National media coverage affirms the importance of preserving consumer choice and innovation in financial matchmaking.
How comparison shopping tools and lead generators revolutionize consumer access to products and services.