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Harmonisation of Cost Elements of the Annual Percentage Rate of Charge, APR

Project No.: AO-2600/97/000169

presented by

Prof. Dr. jur. Udo Reifner
in collaboration with
Marcus Wüst (Dipl.-Math.)
Leo Haidar (Leeds, UK)
Carole Bonhomme (Reims, France)

Hamburg, 17th March 1998

Executive Summary

  1. Regarding the existing harmonisation of the APR cost elements in the Member States the law in all countries mainly refers to the Directive using its wording and its exemptions. A minimum standard of APR squarelosure has been reached Europe-wide. Although there are quite important differences in the cost structure of consumer credit contracts (1) these differences are mostly not specific for one country, even occurring between different offers inside the same country and (2) there seems to be a consensus in practice among providers about a minimum standard. Accordingly, in all Member States all payments concerning services which are directly connected to the credit are included. Such services concern:

    As to all other fees the practice assumes that the exemptions of the Directive apply. Consequently the following cost elements are not included:

  2. There are three services to which the Directive seems to be applied differently in Member States:

  3. The above mentioned differences would, with regard to the standards in all Member States, have been eliminated by the courts if those courts were to have sufficient chances to monitor the application of the Directive. In fact, all countries provide little or no case law on this matter which has to do with a lack of effective sanctions and too little financial incentive for a consumer to sue a creditor on the grounds of APR squarelosure.

  4. The purpose of the Directive is not only harmonisation but also consumer protection. The goal of the APR squarelosure rules may be defined as follows:

    In fact most national legislation also attribute a second goal to APR squarelosure a goal that is at least also referred to in the motivation of the second consumer credit Directive:

  5. In the context of a high standard of consumer protection as well as in the context of the effective achievement of the purpose of the regulation the factual situation in the Member States is still unsatisfactory. In practice up to 30% of standard costs a consumer will pay in a consumer credit agreement are not represented in the APR. The exemptions in the Directive concerning some linked products like insurance and bank account fees have led to their total exclusion. The sophisticated restrictions on the application of these exemptions in the Directive itself have no practical effect. Accordingly, this regulation has failed to achieve its goals. The effects of this situation are visible in the following phenomena:

  6. The single mathematical formula is effectively harmonising the way of APR calculation in those countries where they have been already prescribed when the study was conducted. (all but Germany, France and Finland) The recalculation of the APRs showed no mathematical deviations. All deviations stemmed only from the inclusion or exclusion of additional cost elements. There are therefore no mathematical arguments which may be raised for the inclusion or exclusion of connected services and costs. The mathematical formula, where K1 = K0 * (1 + i)t is sufficient to calculate all kinds of credit and other services - with the help of spreadsheet software and iterations - if  the payments of the consumer and the provider as well as the time when these payments are effected (payment flow calculation) are known. Sophisticated formulae are unnecessary and mostly only applicable to specific standardised credit contracts, tending to hide normative assumptions in mathematical language. The trend towards individualised products necessitates payment flow calculations where each single payment may be defined separately, excluding all kinds of mathematical formulae.

  7. Most national legislation fail to clarify the question concerning the link between a cost element appearing in a credit contract and the credit cost itself. National legislation understands the Directive as follows:

  8. In light of the requirements of consumer protection, national legislation and the practical enforcement of the Directive seems to be insufficient. This could either be remedied by additional action of the EU Commission to further national regulations which are more reflecting the spirit of the present Directive. But also a shortening and clarification of the wording of the Directive could support such developments. The report formulates a new Art. 1 letter d  and a new letter e on „linked transactions“ as well as a number of examples given in Annex 4 replacing the given Art. 1a of the Directive. Its main intention is

  9. Besides the report proposes that Consumer Organisations in Member States should be equipped with a computer programme that provides input facilities and explanation for all cost items to be included, combines them into a correctly calculated Annual Percentage Rate of Charge and stores the credit data used for such calculations for later evaluation in order to monitor the practical application of the Directive in all Member States where presently monitoring seems to be insufficient.

Created: 31/01/03. Last changed: 31/01/03.
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