By Jarrett Renshaw
(Reuters) — The Biden administration on Tuesday unveiled its latest measures to combat rising consumer costs and charges known as junk fees, including an interagency effort to crack down on inflated prices and limiting what banks can charge for late credit card payments.
The Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission will lead a joint «strike force» aimed at stopping illegal corporate behavior that hikes prices on Americans through anticompetitive or fraudulent business practices, said administration officials.
The administration will also finalize a rule that slashes credit card fees from an average of $31 down to $8, and another that gives ranchers and farmers more leverage when negotiating contracts with meat packers, officials said.
«Late credit card fees have gotten out of control,» Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Rohit Chopra said during a press call previewing the moves.
The moves to address rising costs come as Democratic President Joe Biden and his allies try to change views among the many American voters unhappy with his economic stewardship.
Biden is set to highlight the steps during the sixth meeting of the Competition Council, which he created by executive order to stop anticompetitive practices in sectors from agriculture to drugs and labor.
Biden has successfully pressured companies such as Airbnb and Live Nation to limit junk fees — or extra charges — that customers pay when booking concert tickets, hotels and airfares.
The White House Council of Economic advisers estimates that the administration's actions will eliminate more than $20 billion in junk fees annually. The moves to counter junk fees is expected to feature in Biden's State of Union Speech on
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