“credit card acceptance fees have gone up in the US since the pandemic” and the reason is fascinating!
It's not Visa/Mastercard being greedy, it's an arms race by banks to produce higher tier and more exclusive cards to capture more interchange revenue and fund more generous rewards programs! (See: Chase Sapphire Reserve, which got an entirely new card tier added to the interchange rate table so Chase could compete with Amex's US rewards program.)
A random observation I will make here is that there are two ends of the market that are expensive to serve in banking, the very top end and the very bottom end.
At the top end, customers are expensive to serve but bring in revenue. At the bottom end, customers are expensive to serve and, despite what you might think, often don't bring in enough revenue to pay for that service.
As a society, we shouldn't want this to happen and for people to leave the regulated banking industry. The alternative is, well, “alternative finance”, which means the lower end of the economy pays extortionate fees to what rounds to payday lenders and cheque cashing businesses with extra layers.
When money leaves the regulated banking industry, society bares the cost of increased difficulty tackling financial crime and tax evasion. This is why the UK and EU has universal basic banking.
The agreement between most governments and banks has roughly been “Okay, we will let you continue to make a healthy profit on the middle class, but in return you have to accept these unprofitable lower segment customers”.
This saves the government money by being able to do direct depositing of benefits instead of handing out cash at the Post Office, allows companies to adopt computerised payroll which makes tax easier to collect, and customers using cards in shops reduces tax evasion at retail.
@scarlet or was stuck with postal banking for a while after there was a more universal access to banking
which was initially miserable and erm, I believe never stopped being miserable in the UK
in The Netherlands it got to be better then actual banking, but then Thatcherism struck here and it needed to be fully privatised..... and kinda went to shit since in terms of competitiveness in terms of service (ING is just another bank, with shitty terms, shitty handling of things like Google, etc)