Tackling credit card interest rates is a legitimate policy goal worth pursuing. Here's the thing though—if we cap rates at 10%, we're likely looking at a massive wave of card cancellations. Why? Simple math. Credit card companies operate on thin margins outside of interest income. Start cutting that off and they'll shed high-risk customers like there's no tomorrow. That means millions could suddenly lose access to credit. The unintended consequences matter just as much as the good intentions. It's the classic policy trap: fix one problem, create two others.
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FOMOSapien
· 01-10 18:02
ngl this is a classic case of idealism versus reality... The 10% interest rate cap sounds great, but banks will really just disappear, and in the end, the ones who suffer are those who desperately need loans.
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ZeroRushCaptain
· 01-10 15:22
Ha, it's the same old excuse of "protecting high-risk users." I've heard it a thousand times in the crypto world... And what happened? Still cut in half.
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DefiSecurityGuard
· 01-10 13:05
⚠️ CRITICAL: this is exactly the kind of policy exploit vector i've been warning about. cap the rates, suddenly the high-risk addresses get blacklisted from the system. classic rugpull on the credit market, ngl.
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fren.eth
· 01-10 13:03
NGL, this logic is a bit rigid... If banks really run out of money, they can still rely on other methods to fleece users.
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LeekCutter
· 01-10 13:02
A classic policy dilemma, the story of good intentions backfiring is played out every day.
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AirdropLicker
· 01-10 12:56
ngl That's why regulation is so difficult... what seems like a simple numbers game can actually ruin so many people.
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WalletDetective
· 01-10 12:46
NGL, this is a typical case of pressing the gourd only to have it pop up elsewhere... Limiting interest rates feels good for a moment, but high-risk users end up with their cards unusable. And then what?
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MEVHunterNoLoss
· 01-10 12:42
NGL, this logic doesn't quite hold up. If the banks really want to withdraw, just do it. They've already made enough profit anyway...
Tackling credit card interest rates is a legitimate policy goal worth pursuing. Here's the thing though—if we cap rates at 10%, we're likely looking at a massive wave of card cancellations. Why? Simple math. Credit card companies operate on thin margins outside of interest income. Start cutting that off and they'll shed high-risk customers like there's no tomorrow. That means millions could suddenly lose access to credit. The unintended consequences matter just as much as the good intentions. It's the classic policy trap: fix one problem, create two others.