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…The panel also heard from a proponent of the 36% cap.

Rachel Richards, fiscal policy and government relations director at the Lansing-based Michigan League for Public Policy, which advocates for low-income residents, said people are “trapped in a cycle of debt” — needing a payday loan for unexpected car repairs or medical expenses while still needing all of their next paycheck to keep up with regular needs like rent, groceries and utilities.

About 20 states and Washington, D.C., have capped payday lending rates around 36% APR or taken other steps to curb high fees, according to the Durham, North Carolina-based Center for Responsible Lending.

“People in these states have been able to find more reasonable and responsible ways to access capital,” Richards said. “In fact, we as a state should be doing more to actually encourage better and wider access to small, low-rate, reasonable loans for people in crisis situations.”

Read more at Crain’s Grand Rapids Business.