One solution to predatory payday lending

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Payday Loans by Steve Rhodes, on Flickr
They go by a variety of names, but payday loan shops usually have a common theme: Money is available for you, and it's available now.
Of course, it's not as simple as that. Sure, you get your $500 or $1,000 to make that rent payment or emergency medical bill, but the extremely high fees and interest rates can put you in a deeper hole. That makes for a vicious cycle, as these operations target mostly low-income people.
The solution? Walmart, says Slate's Matthew Yglesias.
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The solution to this problem, I think, would be for banking services to be performed by a firm that already has low-income clients and would have an interest in increasing its level of engagement with them even if the payday lending operation wasn't profitable per se. In a word, you need Walmart.
Banks don't touch this market because it's not profitable enough. So will Walmart step in? It has tried and failed numerous times to get a U.S. banking license, so it's certainly clear the mega-chain is interested in financial services.
The fear that Walmart would become too powerful is worth considering. But so is the reality that too many of us face: sometimes, you really need that $500.
For more on payday loans, check out this excellent Marketplace series.