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Bankers Group Opposes Bill to Expand Credit Union Lending

SEP. 23, 2021

Bankers Group Opposes Bill to Expand Credit Union Lending

DATED SEP. 23, 2021
DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
  • Authors
    Ballentine, James C. Ballentine C.
  • Institutional Authors
    American Bankers Association
  • Code Sections
  • Subject Area/Tax Topics
  • Industry Groups
    Banking, brokerage services, and related financial services
  • Jurisdictions
  • Tax Analysts Document Number
    2021-37005
  • Tax Analysts Electronic Citation
    2021 TNTF 185-22
    2021 EOR 10-44
  • Magazine Citation
    The Exempt Organization Tax Review, Oct. 2021, p. 297
    88 Exempt Org. Tax Rev. 297 (2021)

September 23, 2021

The Honorable Vicente Gonzalez
Member of Congress
113 Cannon House Office Building
United States House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515

The Honorable Brian Fitzpatrick
Member of Congress
271 Cannon House Office Building
United House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515

Dear Representatives Gonzalez and Fitzpatrick:

We write to express our opposition to H.R. 5189, the “Member Business Loan Expansion Act, legislation that your recently authored that would substantially broaden the tax-exempt credit union industry's business lending authority.

Restrictions on the ability of credit unions to engage in business lending are not a constraint to meeting business credit needs, and America's banks remain opposed to all efforts to change them. Congress has repeatedly emphasized the need for credit unions to focus their efforts on consumer lending and has placed appropriate limits on credit union business lending “to ensure that credit unions continue to fulfill their specified mission of meeting the credit and savings needs of consumers . . . through an emphasis on consumer rather than business loans.” (Senate Banking Committee Report 105-193) (emphasis added.) A mandate to focus on consumers makes sense — after all, credit unions are exempt from federal and most state income taxes specifically to help meet the credit and savings needs of people of modest means.

This legislation would further erode the restrictions on credit union business lending in three important ways. First, the legislation would change the terms under which credit unions may offer business loans, making it easier for credit unions to underwrite commercial real estate projects by enabling longer repayment periods. Second, the legislation would directly undermine the asset cap on credit union business lending by doubling the exemption for small loans, despite only two-tenths of one percent of the industry approaching the statutory limitation. Third, the legislation expands credit union access to low-cost sources of funds for, among other things, business loans. Each of these will have the effect of fueling further credit union business lending expansion, all indirectly financed by their tax-exempt status.

Congress placed purposeful limitations on the percentage of a credit union's assets that can be comprised of business loans to prevent the credit union tax subsidy from being used to support large business loans for apartment buildings or strip malls, the need for which is already met by tax-paying financial institutions. The small loan exemption is likewise tailored to ensure that credit unions have sufficient lending authority to meet the credit needs of their members, without allowing them to stray from their congressionally mandated mission of serving people of modest means. This proposed legislation threatens to undermine those carefully crafted guardrails.

Congress should focus efforts on ensuring that credit unions live up to their chartered mission of service to consumers of “small means,” and we encourage you to reconsider and refocus your proposed legislation on mechanisms to ensure that the credit union industry fulfils its important purpose. We respectfully oppose this legislation as currently drafted.

Sincerely,

James C. Ballentine
American Bankers Association
Washington, DC

DOCUMENT ATTRIBUTES
  • Authors
    Ballentine, James C. Ballentine C.
  • Institutional Authors
    American Bankers Association
  • Code Sections
  • Subject Area/Tax Topics
  • Industry Groups
    Banking, brokerage services, and related financial services
  • Jurisdictions
  • Tax Analysts Document Number
    2021-37005
  • Tax Analysts Electronic Citation
    2021 TNTF 185-22
    2021 EOR 10-44
  • Magazine Citation
    The Exempt Organization Tax Review, Oct. 2021, p. 297
    88 Exempt Org. Tax Rev. 297 (2021)
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