At $50 Billion, Is MasterCard and Visa’s Member Banks’ Cartel Nearing its End?

The total annual merchant interchange fees continue to soar and reflect a growing discontinuity with the nation’s recession and realities that technology and efficiencies should be lowering fees. Instead, according to Robin Sidel’s May 14th WSJ article ["Consumers May Pay For Credit-Card Bill"], merchant interchange fees “generated roughly $50 billion last year.”  Robin explained on the phone this afternoon that this rate was based on information from The Nelson Report,
Just how monstrously tainted are these anticompetitive charge-card fees that violate federal antitrust laws?

Look at it this way:  Visa and MasterCard’s member banks’ interchange fees last year were much greater than three-times Microsoft’s entire net income of $14.8 billion dollars last year. The total interchange fees charged to merchants and paid by consumers last year were greater than the combined net earnings of Chevron ($17.5 billion), Hewlett-Packard ($7.2), Intel ($6.2), Walt Disney ($4.6), Apple ($3.4), Lockheed Martin ($3.0) McDonald’s ($2.3), Federal Express ($2.0) and Walgreen ($2.0). [source: Forbes 400].
 

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