
The rent-to-own federal bill defines
the
rent-to-own transaction
as a lease
he
rent-to-own transaction provides millions of consumers a debt-free,
flexible way to acquire products. There’s no other transaction
like it in the marketplace. You can return the product at any
time for any reason with no penalty. Rent-to-own is the most
widely used transaction that has yet to be defined in the federal
code. While 47 states have defined the rent-to-own transaction
as a lease, Congress remains one of the last legislative arenas
to define the transaction. A federal lease definition will
secure rent-to-own’s
economic future, thus enhancing small business and corporate
competition that will continue to lower prices and improve
customer service.
The rent-to-own federal bill
is a
consumer protection bill
rent-to-own
federal bill is good for consumers because it creates federal
regulations for disclosures and strengthens consumer protection
in 33 states. The federal bill mandates reinstatement rights
for the consumer. Reinstatement rights protect the customer
who cannot continue to make payments
and has to return the product, but does not want to lose payments
already made toward a purchase. The customer can reinstate
his/her payment history to count fully for the ultimate ownership
of the product. While most rent-to-own companies offer lifetime
reinstatement rights as a part of their business practices,
the federal bill requires a minimum time for payment reinstatement
as a guaranteed consumer protection.
The federal bill mandates
full disclosure—both verbally and in writing—of every penny
the customer will pay when doing business with a rent-to-own
store. The rent-to-own store must disclose all costs, including
total rent-to-own costs vs. the cost of the merchandise
if bought in one cash transaction. The federal bill mandates
pricing disclosures in rent-to-own
advertising as well. An informed consumer is a powerful consumer
and rent-to-own businesses thrive when communication is clear
with their customers.
The rent-to-own federal bill is good
for business
y defining the largest undefined
transaction in the economy today, Congress gives rental dealers
the security that their rent-to-own stores are finally sanctioned
as valid American businesses. The
value of their business will increase. Investor and lending
security will increase. Increased competition will motivate
rental dealers to improve their business and provide customer
service that is better than retail.
The rent-to-own federal bill is good
for the economy
ongressional
passage of a rent-to-own definition will provide investor
security, thus allowing rent-to-own business to grow, compete
and improve services to the American public. The value of
rent-to-own will increase on Wall Street while providing
lending confidence to the small business of rent-to-own.
A federal definition will
open business to potential rental dealers in Wisconsin, Minnesota
and New Jersey—states that currently
have no rent-to-own transaction definition—contributing
hundreds of millions of dollars annually to those economies
and provide consumers an option that does not exist in those
states.
The rent-to-own federal bill is about
the American free-market system
he federal bill provides valid,
honest free-market enterprise in Minnesota, Wisconsin and New
Jersey—states with courts that have thus far prevented
a rent-to-own transaction definition. The
federal bill does not change state law—it changes court rulings.
Courts should not be making law; legislators make law. That’s
why the rent-to-own industry is seeking the help of Congress
with a federal initiative.
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