Prohibitions against usury date back to biblical times. The prophet Ezekiel compares a usurer to someone who is a “thief, a murderer…who oppresses the poor and the needy” (18:10-13). After 1776, all states adopted general usury laws. Most states limited interest rates to under 10%.  However, beginning in the late 1970s and early 1980s, many state usury laws were significantly weakened, preempted or even repealed.  The loss of traditional usury protections enabled usurious predatory lending practices to become even more harmful and widespread.

 

As a result, Americans have become extremely vulnerable to usurious exploitation.  Some tax preparers provide rapid refunds to consumers for a fee that, when calculated over the course of a year, can approach an annual percentage rate (APR) of over 400%.  Similarly, payday lenders lock borrowers into debt treadmills, with fees that translate into APRs of 300% to 500%.  The removal of fiscal restraints has led to high interest rates and fees that are crippling Americans across the socioeconomic spectrum.

 

JCPA believes that usury laws should be revitalized by capping consumer interest rates at reasonable levels as determined by state legislatures and Congress.

 

The community relations field should:

 
Share

Next Up:

Birthright Citizenship

Take Action Donate

December 8, 2025

NSGP Update

December 8, 2025

Protected: Immigration Raid Abuses Tracker

November 20, 2025

Thank you for using our 2025 Hanukkah Guide

November 18, 2025

New Moves to Dismantle Education Department Threaten Students’ Rights and Safety

JCPA

Molly Balk

JCPA

Tracey Labgold

November 5, 2025

JCPA Statement on NYC Mayoral Race

October 27, 2025

Seven Years After Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting, JCPA Highlights Crisis of Increasingly-Normalized Antisemitism and Extremism

October 21, 2025

JCPA in The New York Times on the dangerous normalization of antisemitism and broader hate by political leaders

October 21, 2025

JCPA Alarmed by Special Counsel Nominee Paul Ingrassia’s Support for Extremist Views and Individuals