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Putting students in debt by using Prepaid Cards Double Student IDs.
- April 25, 2012
- Posted by: admin
- Category: Uncategorized
The Huffington Post | By Bonnie Kavoussi
Posted: 04/19/2012 11:51 am
A number of lenders are partnering with colleges to offer prepaid cards that function as student IDs, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Credit card companies are finding new ways on how to manipulate themselves back into the lives of the college students in the USA.
These student IDs grant students access to campus buildings and let them check out library books, have campus meals, pay for laundry and go to the gym. Since the cards are offered by prominent lenders, they can be used to pay for products at retailers that accept those cards.
North Carolina State University announced on Wednesday that it is partnering with U.S. Bank to give the Wolfpack One Card to incoming freshmen this fall. Current students, faculty and staff can pay $10 to get the new card.
Unlike most prepaid cards, the Wolfpack One Card has no monthly fees, no fees for point-of-sale purchases, no fees for withdrawals at U.S. Bank ATMs, no enrollment fees for new students, and no minimum balance to keep the account active, according to the press release and the WSJ.
Since the Wolfpack One Card is backed by MasterCard, it can be used to pay for products and services “worldwide,” according to Dan Adams, associate vice chancellor at North Carolina State University. It also can be used for direct deposit from employers.
Partnerships with schools serve as an invitation to banks to once again tap into the profitable student market, (turning the students into becoming products of the bank via the loan or money that owe to the bank).
Many colleges already offer student IDs that can be used at retailers near campus. Harvard students are automatically enrolled in the university’s Crimson Cash program through their student IDs, which they can use at a number of nearby stores and restaurants. Crimson Cash partners with American Express, MasterCard and Visa, according to its website.
Prepaid cards are becoming more popular as traditional bank accounts remain out of reach for many people, despite their notorious fees. 13 percent of all Americans used prepaid cards in 2011: up from 11 percent in 2010, according to a recent study by Javelin Strategy & Research, a market research group. More Americans are adopting prepaid cards in order to avoid hidden bank fees, according to a recent Pew study.
More Americans also are relying less on cash. 43 percent of Americans have gone a week without using cash, according to a recent Rasmussen survey.