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Attorney
General Gansler Files Suit Against Major Credit Card Companies
Suit Challenges Rules that Prevent Merchant Discounts and Incentives
BALTIMORE,
MD ( October 4, 2010) - Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler
announced today that Maryland, the United States Department of Justice
and six other states filed a civil antitrust lawsuit against American
Express, Visa and MasterCard. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District
Court for the Eastern District of New York, challenges the card networks’ rules
that prevent merchants from offering consumers discounts or other
incentives to use lower-cost cards for payment of goods and services.
Merchants who accept credit cards must pay a fee each time a
consumer makes a purchase with a credit card, and different types
of cards carry different fees. Merchants pass onto consumers the
costs of credit card transactions by way of higher retail prices.
The card networks’ rules that prohibit merchants from offering
consumers incentives to use a lower-cost card cause merchants’ costs
of doing business, and consumer prices, to rise.
At the same time, Maryland, the Department of Justice and the
other states filed a proposed settlement with Visa and MasterCard
that would require the two companies to allow merchants to offer
discounts, incentives and information to consumers to encourage
use of less costly cards. A merchant who accepts only Visa and
MasterCard may take advantage of the relief immediately.
“The card networks’ rules make it impossible for
merchants to negotiate lower rates, and they drive up consumer
prices,” said Attorney General Gansler. “With this
settlement and litigation, consumers will see a wider range of
competitive prices for goods and services.”
Under the proposed settlement, Visa and MasterCard are required
to allow their merchants to:
- offer consumers an immediate discount
or rebate or a discounted product or service for using a particular
card network, low-cost
card within that network or other form of payment;
- express a
preference for the use of a particular card network, low-cost
card within that network or other form of payment;
- promote a
particular card network, low-cost card within that network or
other form of payment through posted information or other
communications to consumers; and,
- communicate to consumers the cost incurred
by the merchant when the consumer uses a particular credit
card network, type of card
within that network, or other form of payment.
The litigation against American Express seeks to allow merchants
that accept American Express to offer the same discounting and
other incentives to American Express card users as the proposed
settlement with Visa and MasterCard allows.
The states of Connecticut, Iowa, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio and
Texas also joined the lawsuit.
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