Archive for October, 2008

Different country, different banking practices

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

You’d think that that these days banking practices around Europe would be fairly standard. After all, the banks handle international business every day so they’re in constant contact with their counterparts in other countries.

Of course, it’s one of many areas where European business practices are far from standard.

Take the UK and France for example. Two countries with a very long history of interaction so you’d think that many things would be similar except that they aren’t.

In the UK, credit cards are commonplace and it’s normal, expected even, for people to have several of them. In France, credit cards are a relatively new phenonmen and remain very rare.

In the UK, almost everyone has an overdraft and the banks prefer you to be permanently overdrawn as they collect more fees that way. In France, they’ll close your account if you’re overdrawn more than a couple of months.

In the UK, debit cards don’t have any purchase limit on them. In France, you can’t buy more than 3000�� a month usually, which is why you often see people resorting to cheques towards the end of the month.

In the UK, nobody will accept a cheque without a cheque card (a card issued by their bank and guaranteeing the cheque will be paid). In France, almost everyone until recently accepted cheques because if you bounced a cheque you could be banned from having a cheque account at all. That actually worked well until very recently when the economic situation seems to have caused something of a run on dud cheques so the effect is that more and more businesses don’t accept cheques which is sure to cause trouble soon so long as that debit card spending limit remains.

Any one of those differences can easily fell you if you don’t know about it in advance.

Copyright 2008-2010 by Financial Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Parents are still giving their “kids” money

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

With the credit squeeze still upon us, it shouldn’t be a great surprise to learn that many parents are still tapping the Bank of Mum & Dad even as adults.

The research commissioned by Scottish Widows indicates that over a third of parents have had to tap into their retirement savings to fund these requests from their children. That’s a scary thought as it implies that those parents may well need to call in that loan at some point if/when they run out of money for their own retirement and I’m sure it’s not something that the “kids” have considered.

It’s not peanuts either as the research indicates that the amount involved is well over £60 BILLION.

Now, it’s probably fine for the 30% who were asking for money to fund the deposit on a house in that they’ve actually got something “in the bank” so to speak but over 40% were asking for the money to repay debt and that’s money that’s quite simply gone. Quite what those “children” are going to do when their parents come to them asking for the money back so that they can retire in the manner in which they’d planned to is a very good question. One suspects that they’ll end up needing to consider secured loans on the parental home at some point.

Copyright 2008-2010 by Financial Perspectives. All rights reserved.

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