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Wisconsin CU League News Release - 02/21/11
Credit unions delivered $203 million to Wisconsin consumers in 2010,
and more, report says
Pewaukee, Wis. - Credit unions, which are member-owned
financial institutions that do not have stockholders, saved 2.2 million
Wisconsin consumers $203 million via competitive rates on savings and
loans and lower and fewer fees for financial services, according to the
REAL Solutions 2010 Scorecard for Wisconsin Credit Unions, a report by
the Wisconsin Credit Union League. Members of credit unions, the report
says, saved more than $112 million on loans, more than $56 million on
savings products and paid $33 million less in fees for financial
services.
The report also cited millions of dollars of additional value from
credit unions via “intangible” services like free financial
counseling that has prevented home foreclosures and improved
borrowers’ creditworthiness, free tax
preparation for low-income filers, outreach to new
Americans, financial education within schools and more. Those
services are part of a voluntary – not mandated – effort by
credit unions called REAL Solutions to help families and small
businesses in ways that for-profit financial institutions typically
won’t extend themselves.
During 2010, the report says, credit unions increased their lending to
small businesses 8.3% to compensate for an almost equal decrease in
available business credit from banks. A whopping $44 million of the
savings on financial product usage accrued to lower-income consumers;
credit unions, in fact, operated 40% of all the financial institution
branches in low-income areas. Nearly all credit unions offered loans of
$500 or less at modest interest rates – an alternative to costly
payday loans. And credit unions also outperformed non-credit union
lenders by approving 71.3% of home loans for low-income borrowers and
77% of home loans for minority borrowers, compared to a 66.2% and 56.7%
approval rate by others, respectively.
Credit unions also supervised 109 branches inside schools to teach young
people the regular habit of saving; students statewide have stashed a
whopping $2.1 million in their in-school accounts. Credit unions also
delivered 1,221 presentations to 31,027 consumers to improve their
financial savvy, paid for 47 Wisconsin teachers to attend summer
workshops that help them improve financial lessons offered in
classrooms, purchased 75,000 copies of a personal finance magazine to
help every public high school achieve state teaching standards related
to money management, supported 2,943 charities and civic activities,
granted $162,150 in student scholarships and trained 3,520 of their own
employees to encourage greater investing activity among members.
“Credit unions’ unique member-ownership puts members’
needs before profits,” the report says. “That enables credit
unions to go where other financial institutions can’t.”
Learn more at www.theleague.coop/scorecard.
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| Credit unions delivered $203 million to Wisconsin consumers in 2010, and more, report says |
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