Please don’t get rid of cheques

EDITOR, The Tribune.

SO, the good Governor of The Central Bank thinks cheques are redundant and in 2023 he will declare them a dinosaur.

When employees were paid cash or by cheque there were plus - about 25,000 chequing accounts identified to the middle class and more wealthy people – average Joe Bahamian dealt solely in cash and that was it.

Employers decided to go to transfer of pay cheques to employee bank accounts - wow! chequing accounts exploded to over 160,000 plus, but what the good Governor is missing is those accounts are active once a week when the pay cheque is withdrawn and cash taken – leaving the same honest-to-God cheque users mostly, as said middle class and more wealthy, using cheques — historically almost as old as currency - you don’t need a printed cheque format, just I promise to pay and the appropriate postage stamp it’s legal.

Consumers today used to an extent electronic transfer – a lot even the small salaried person debit cards and you see them making small purchases, I mean small, a few dollars - Credit cards if you wish to increase the amount of cash you have available.

There is absolutely no reason to delete cheques. They don’t cost the bank or the Central Bank a dime - printing and clearing are to the cost of the user. What is strange, remember all the bally-hoo about electronic clearing, $1 plus million - bush crack gone - very recently CIBC added to their now costly services forwarding scanned cheques you use, that has had to have a cost — you mean CIBC didn’t cheque what the cheque policy of the Central Bank was? Hard to swallow that.

It is totally illogical why The Central Bank plans to remove the use of cheques. The same group that used them before will continue to use them. Pensioners will be happy if they stay, as will a lot of businesses. Tracking payments is far easier with paper than electronically.

No, protect the right of over 25,000 living Bahamians - we want cheques to stay.

K FERNANDER

Nassau,

September, 2022.

Comments

JokeyJack says...

They don't worry about your "rights" because they know the majority will keep voting FNM or PLP. Bahamians have been trained to do that just like a show horse jumping over a stick. Massa say jump??? We jumpin boi.

Posted 23 September 2022, 10:58 p.m. Suggest removal

truetruebahamian says...

Cheques are a necessary part of monetary transaction in New Providence and In the family islands . Centralised arrogance does not translate well outside of the capital, and even then it doesn’t bear up well.

Posted 24 September 2022, 4:40 p.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

This is what happens when a national entity has a stake in a private firm and they have the power to eliminate all of its competitors. First it was the moratorium on payment providers. Maybe next govt wont accept payment in anything but sand dollars. This is all anti-innovation

Posted 24 September 2022, 9:08 p.m. Suggest removal

sheeprunner12 says...

One world government being rolled out

Posted 25 September 2022, 9:32 a.m. Suggest removal

ohdrap4 says...

I paid my electricity bill online. Have yet to receive a receipt ftom BPL.
Bank says the charge was placed on the card, but merchant has not claimed it.

Sadly, I might have to revert to standing in line to pay with cash.

Why the rush to eliminate cheques when the atm machines can read and process them readily.

There will also be an impact on many businesses. A clerk can prepare multiple chques for the boss to sign, whereas the burden of sending electronic payments falls solely on account signatories.

A messenger can carry a cheque payment, but does not have a business debit card.

Posted 25 September 2022, 10:53 a.m. Suggest removal

sheeprunner12 says...

Every Govt department uses a business chequing account.

How will that be phased out in less than two years??

Posted 26 September 2022, 3:55 p.m. Suggest removal

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