redit unions have been snatching customers from banks amid consumer
frustration over rising fees and outrage over Wall Street's role in the
financial crisis.
Now banks are fighting back by trying to take away something vital to credit unions — their federal tax exemption.
With fast-growing credit unions posing more formidable competition to
banks, industry trade groups are pressing the White House and Congress
to end a tax break that dates to the Great Depression.
"Many tax-exempt credit unions have morphed from serving 'people of
small means' to become full-service, financially sophisticated
institutions," Frank Keating, president of the American Bankers Assn.,
wrote to President Obama last month.
"The time has come to abolish this exemption," Keating said in the
letter, which was part of a blitz that included print and radio ads in
the nation's capital.
Bankers long have complained the tax break is an unfair advantage for
large credit unions. Now they see an opportunity to get rid of it as
lawmakers begin work on a major overhaul of the tax code that is aimed
at eliminating many corporate exemptions and lowering the overall tax
rate.
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