Topher wrote:foot-loose wrote:The fee has to be high otherwise people would take the piss and go overdrawn all the time.
Maybe I'm being naive, but I don't think you would get any more people overdrawn than you do at the moment - people don't like going overdrawn, they do it if they have to.
The reason people don't like it is because they get charged a fortune. If it didn't affect them, why would they care?
Topher wrote:foot-loose wrote:If the customer is "not good" at juggling their money, why is that the banks fault?
It's not and I'm not saying their shouldn't be a fee, but a fiver is quite sufficient. They would still earn lots out of it.
But would a fiver be as serious to someone as forty quid? Or would the response be "ah, just go overdrawn - it's only a fiver". The whole point of the extortionate fees is to scare people into not breaking the rules.
Topher wrote:foot-loose wrote:Your analogy of the Government not charging people more for driving further... how else would they government charge for this other than through petrol charges? I see where you are coming from but I think you kinda pissed on your own bonfire there sir.
Pay-per-use roads would penalise this more. But yeah, it maybe was a bad analogy. The point is that everyone is good at some things, but not others. Those who are good at managing money generally can't see how those who aren't good at it can be so shit. No it's not the bank's fault, but equally the bank is doing nothing to help this person get out of trouble by charging extortionate fees.
The difference is that the banks are (or were, until recently) a private business which are there to make money. The government are a public service elected by us and not really there to make a profit.
Topher wrote:foot-loose wrote:Why should the banks provide a current account for free?
The banks can well afford to provide a free current account and charge a person a fiver for going overdrawn and returned direct debits - the price of a first class stamp is 39p I believe - if we assume the banks don't get a bulk discount for postage (they almost certainly will do) and that they send these letters first class (they may or may not, I'm not sure), that is a profit of £4.61 for every customer, every time they go overdrawn and have a direct debit returned, not to mention the profits they make from other sources. Now I would prefer to pay a fiver a month for a current account and have them charge those rates, but they could easily afford to do it without charging for current accounts.
I don't know much about postage, but I'm pretty sure that any discounts available to the banks will be available to anyone else doing bulk postage.
As I said earlier - the charges are one of the ways the banks make money. If it suddenly becomes a lot less profitable, they will want to make the money through other means. The reason the charges were so high was because it was a way of preventing people from breaking whatever rules they had agreed to when they opened the account. The banks attitude will be "fine, no more charges - everyone needs to pay £30 a year for their account, oh, and £1 a day for going overdrawn. Is that fairer for you?".
Yes, it's fairer, I don't argue that - it treats everyone the same. It bloody costs me money though. Money I didn't have to pay before.
boboff wrote:Foots, the answer lies in who the Banks want as customers.
They would ideally have everyone completely maxed out on the OD by the end of each month, they get paid, and the mortgage or rent comes out and they are overdrawn again, so they get the big bucks. As you say, people who only "dip" by a few pounds don't earn the banks enough money. The Banks are mega creaming the profit now, just to sure up their balance sheets.
Take a £100,000 mortgage, 18 months ago the above base premium for most was 1.5%, now its 3.5%, so thats £2000 a year extra profit where the risk is still pretty much the same, at 20 million households thats an increase in the inherent profitability of the market of £20 Billion a year, or about 25% of the total profit from the FTSE 100. This will start to improve things, but at the end of the day we are paying through tax to bail them out and then again to repay the Tax Man, the only benefit is that it should help the stock market which will in turn help pensions and investments (i.e. the old people with no mortgage! )
I know nothing about mortgages. I don't know how they work or where the profits come from. My argument is looking at current accounts as a stand alone product.
boboff wrote:As for excess charges, we all have a choice, I am with RBS (Virgin that was) and as you say when there has been an error I have called and complained and they have refunded me. I also agree free banking is really a nonsense. What I don't get is really the mindset. If you have no overdraft you can't go overdrawn, if you have £1500 already loaned to you on overdraft, you can't spend any more.... why put yourself in the place where you have to borrow to live every month, it's costing you, and slowly eroding your standard of living. My feeling is you save like a bastard until you have a couple of grand in your account, and you use that as an emergency overdraft, ok it's hard to get their, but surely it's only as hard as repaying a £1500 overdraft once you get there? I appreciate that I may sound a twat for not understanding the extreme financial pressures people are under, but it is what I think. "A borrower or lender do not be" as my Grandad used to say.
Seconded.
We live in a culture where we buy before we can afford something. The way we look at it is "can I afford the repayment on that car?" not "can I afford that car?".