WHY DO WE PUT UP WITH THESE BANKS?

EDITOR, The Tribune.

I have realised for decades that as a people we have achieved a level of complete and utter apathy to the extent that we allow inconveniences and outright procedural stupidity to govern our lives to the point of paralysis. Our banking practices are glaringly demonstrative of this.

I have a daughter in university abroad. In order to facilitate her day-to-day needs, a bank account seemed to be the most efficient method. Walking in to the Bank of America, we were greeted by Matt. Matt does not know me from Adam, as the saying goes, but 15 minutes later my daughter walked out with a bank account complete with debit card and applications for credit cards and other services.

Conversely, opening a bank account in the Bahamas has become akin to a mental cross fit trial. It is a virtual joke. I am convinced that the intent is to drive customers away (or nuts), but alas there is nowhere to turn. They are all the same and their sameness is seemingly intentional.

OK let’s give the banks the benefit of the doubt. I get it. The First World (FW) has imposed laborious processes upon us to prevent corruption. One such process lies at the foundation of the banking system; opening a bank account. First off, FW was primarily concerned about its own citizens stashing chunks of taxable or ill gained income into our local banks. FW folk must sit in a room and laugh at what we came up with in order to comply with their collective desire to prevent tax evasion and Money Laundering. They must just be rolling over when they see the obstacles we have placed on the average citizen when it comes to opening an account.

I doubt seriously if their target was our 16-sixteen-year-old children trying to open their first savings account. But I get it. Discretion leads to abuse. So is the appropriate response to insist that our 16-year-old kids produce utility bills. Insane!!! So much for encouraging savings and financial management.

OK I get that if someone is opening a new account then it maybe a good idea to get urine samples so that they Know Your Customer (KYC). (That’s a joke, but who knows where it could end up. We may soon have to provide DNA testing to opening up a fixed deposit). I get KYC, but was it the intent to know me every single time I open an account at the same branch.

How many times do I have to provide a copy of my passport, NIB and utility bill to the same institution?

But it us not their fault. It is ours because we take it. Let’s start a quiet revolt. Let’s all take out new accounts and give them utility bills and then move. LOL. It’s so ridiculous all I can do to remain sane is to be facetious.

There are two assumptions.

1) That it is not the policy to have to repeatedly provide information to a bank you have been doing business with for decades, but that the clerks are in such fear of their compliance departments that they dare not tick every box.

2) That it IS the policy that every time the same customer opens a new account he or she must make themselves known to the bank again, because the bank likes multiple copies of your passport picture, NIB card and utility bills. Or maybe the clerk you are sitting in front of to open up a new account forgot that you are the same person that made deposits in another account the day before. Or maybe due to cutbacks, the banks computers have limited memory and cannot store documents from previous accounts.

Enough is enough. On behalf of the Bahamian people, I am asking the Governor of the Central Bank to immediately issue an executive order advising banks that if a customer holds an account in an institution, that their previous records of your passport, NIB card and utility bill is suffice.

That way, when we walk into a bank where we already have an account we can bring a copy of the order to present to any clerk in fear of the their compliance officer. And that way we can say, “See, Wendy says I don’t have to provide that stuff again”.

I leave you with this. I once tried to open an account at a bank where I had a mortgage. They wanted proof of where I lived. I tried to tell them it was the same place where they lent me the money for. It did not work.

I would never have imagined that we would have to fight this hard to put money in a bank where the fees that they charge are higher than the interest they pay.

We The People are the idiots, not the Banks. We are their source of entertainment.
My Bank Fees (not two cents).

ED FIELDS

Nassau,

October 23, 2014.

Comments

ohdrap4 says...

well passports, drivers licenses and work permits expire.
people also move, rent their houses, change marital status.
when you open a bank account, it is an opportunity to update all that.
that speeds things up rather than the guy pasting together information from previous accounts.

my doctor asked me the other day to update my form. I did not want to because I filled in my age many years ago as 29, and I did not want my age changed.

Posted 24 October 2014, 4:18 p.m. Suggest removal

Well_mudda_take_sic says...

Wendy Craigg will tell you that your daughter remains a resident of The Bahamas for exchange control purposes notwithstanding that she is studying abroad unless she has officially emigrated from The Bahamas and can prove that the immigration authorities in another country have granted her permanent (not temporary) residency. Wendy will further tell you that your daughter has therefore breached Bahamas Exchange Control Regulations unless she obtained prior approval from The Central Bank of The Bahamas to open her bank account at Bank America. Suck on those eggs Mr. Fields!

Posted 24 October 2014, 5:23 p.m. Suggest removal

professionalbahamian says...

You are right Mr Fields, there is no way a bank that you already do business with should be so difficult. The same level of technology that supposedly keeps track of the funds in an account could be used to request updated information via email...say once or twice annually.

Bahamian businesses should be structured to show appreciation and value for Bahamian customers... Ease of doing business within reason spurs economic growth..

It seems that now that we have electronic passports and better NIB cards it would take a very short time for the bank to put a modernized system in place.

Posted 25 October 2014, 1 p.m. Suggest removal

ohdrap4 says...

> The same level of technology that
> supposedly keeps track of the funds in
> an account could be used to request
> updated information via email...say
> once or twice annually.

Yep my bank just requested some update as it seems a rich, long-lost uncle of mine left me a million dollars in Nigeria.

I was updating the form but the lights went out and now my access is locked.

Posted 26 October 2014, 5 p.m. Suggest removal

EasternGate says...

These banks and airlines are vicious predators.I tried to pay a power bill with my credit card.They wanted identification! At the same address for decades, account and credit card has same name, and they want further ID. Incredulous!

Posted 25 October 2014, 6:49 p.m. Suggest removal

DEDDIE says...

Agreed. The banks have become utterly ridiculous. As a businessman I tried to move money quickly from one bank to the next to pay employees. In the past, a bank draft or cashiers cheque would have allowed me to do this but the banks now don't even trust each other. They told me that they had to hold the draft for two days. The banks have now become a hindrance to growth.

Posted 26 October 2014, 7:57 p.m. Suggest removal

The_Oracle says...

Not to mention that they have ben repatriating profits to their Mother countries for decades while they nail us to the cross with full government complicity.
You are absolutely correct though, It is our own Damn fault, all of it.
We sit back behind our bars, locks and cameras, grumble in our complacency,
anticipate the T-shirt of the idiots we choose to control, pillage and squander
our children's future.
The fog of our illusion of sovereignty is dissipating, leaving only the hardship and shame of our folly.
And we do indeed own it.

Posted 27 October 2014, 9:07 a.m. Suggest removal

duppyVAT says...

Who determines that ALL banks charge the same high credit card and loans fees and low interest rates? Its not the banks its the Government and Central Bank - Ed Fields friends

Posted 27 October 2014, 11:53 a.m. Suggest removal

duppyVAT says...

Instead of We the People invest in ourselves with the Credit Unions, we kiss up to Canadian and European banks who control our banking sector. Again blame us.

Posted 27 October 2014, 11:56 a.m. Suggest removal

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