"Therefore the Kingdom of Heaven is like a certain king, who wanted to reconcile accounts with his servants. When he had begun to reconcile, one was brought to him who owed him ten thousand talents. But because he couldn't pay, his lord commanded him to be sold, with his wife, his children, and all that he had, and payment to be made. The servant therefore fell down and kneeled before him, saying, 'Lord, have patience with me, and I will repay you all!' The lord of that servant, being moved with compassion, released him, and forgave him the debt.
But that servant went out, and found one of his fellow servants, who owed him one hundred denarii, and he grabbed him, and took him by the throat, saying, 'Pay me what you owe!' "So his fellow servant fell down at his feet and begged him, saying, 'Have patience with me, and I will repay you!' He would not, but went and cast him into prison, until he should pay back that which was due. So when his fellow servants saw what was done, they were exceedingly sorry, and came and told to their lord all that was done. Then his lord called him in, and said to him, 'You wicked servant! I forgave you all that debt, because you begged me. Shouldn't you also have had mercy on your fellow servant, even as I had mercy on you?' His lord was angry, and delivered him to the tormentors, until he should pay all that was due to him." Matthew 18:23-35
I thought about this parable from the Gospel of Matthew as I closed my Bank of America account at the start of the New Year. I had a long-time checking account (for more than a decade) in which I had dutifully kept the $750 minimum balance to avoid a monthly maintenance fee. In December I received a statement that showed $14 missing. At that point I read more carefully the letter I had received from Bank of America on new fee structures. It explained that to avoid a $14 monthly fee I now needed a $1500 minimum balance. I did not like either choice-paying the $14 per month or adding another $750 to the minimum balance.
It is bad enough that the interest banks pay on deposited money is negligibly small. Now you must provide the bank with large amounts of free capital or your deposited money will be appropriated. Prior to the 2008 financial crisis, institutions such as Bank of America generated large amounts of revenue from usurious interest rates on credit cards and hefty fees for overdrafts and late payments. However, new laws forbidding some of the more egregious practices have sharply curtailed that revenue stream, so banks are instituting new fees to make up the difference.
I decided to shop for a new bank and I was struck by some advice given while conversing with a local businesswoman. "Never do business with a bank that has more than three branches. Banks with three or less branches are too small to be of much value to bigger banks, so there is little risk of a buyout." On hearing this advice, I remembered that I had never opened an account at Bank of America. I opened an account at a large regional bank that was bought by Bank of America. The same is true of another bank I do business with-M & T. I originally opened an account with First Maryland Bank, which was bought by All First, which then disintegrated in a currency trading scandal and was acquired by M & T.
I went to Farmers and Merchants, a small community bank with only three branches, all in northwest Baltimore County. They offered me totally free checking with no minimum balance. I opened a new account and the next day went to Bank of America and closed my account before any additional fees could be assessed.
There are, of course, some tradeoffs with switching to a small local bank. I can only visit the bank when I'm near my house, not anywhere in the country, which was the case with Bank of America. I can only have free use of an ATM machine at one of those three branches, anywhere else I have to pay a transaction fee. But, with proper planning and use of the Internet-even small banks offer online banking-these inconveniences should not be much of an issue. I have to ask myself, is $14 x 12 months, or $168 per year worth it for the additional accessibility Bank of America offers. I would never have the need to use ATMs far away from my house often enough to justify paying $168 per year to access Bank of America's nationwide ATM network. If I have to do that occasionally, I'll pay the $2 transaction fee.
When I closed my account at Bank of America, the manager noted that I had been a long-time customer and asked my reason. I told her that I was unhappy with the new fees being imposed. I said that it reminded me of the parable of the ungrateful servant. She didn't seem to understand the biblical reference. She handed me the cash for the remaining funds in my account and had me sign for it. No counter offer or apology for the new fee structure was made.
Bank of America and the other large banks created an unsustainable business model that generated revenue from high fees and usurious interest rates on high-risk loans. When the model failed they were shielded from the market consequences with billions of dollars in taxpayer bailouts on the condition that they end many of the practices that caused the failures. But it appears that rather than comply with the intentions of the new law, Bank of America is looking for loopholes in order to revive their old business model.
Of course, the large banks insist that even though they are exempt, all their customers should abide by the rules of the market place. That being the case, I think we the customers need to shop more for banking and ignore much of the slick marketing. We also need to overcome our inertia and be willing to change banks when market conditions change. It is easy to close an account and open a new one at another institution.
Ask yourself, if I were shopping for a bank today and considering all the available options, would I choose the bank that I currently have? If the answer to that question is no, then it is time to change banks. Look around and you will find many community banks and credit unions that offer excellent services at fair prices.
When I think about it, there is really no reason for Bank of America and its ilk to even be in business. In fact, if not for the billions of dollars in bad debt forgiven by the taxpayers, they would not be in business. But, Bank of America was not about to forgive the new fees they were imposing on me. It is time for customers to stop paying for all the lunacy and take their business elsewhere.
Showing posts with label consumer spending. Show all posts
Showing posts with label consumer spending. Show all posts
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Monday, December 8, 2008
Shopping our way to prosperity?
Individuals who wish to accumulate wealth and become financially secure are told to work hard, be productive, save, and invest. The advice is old fashioned and trite. Recent events have shown it doesn’t always work, but, it’s difficult to suggest a better alternative. Work hard, don’t produce, spend every dollar you make and then some will certainly not lead to financial security.
However, as the holiday season approaches and with it the annual nationwide orgy of shopping, we are told that the way out of the economic crisis is to keep up the behavior that made the mess. Black Friday sales figures are headline news. The media, politicians, and corporate executives spread a gospel of salvation through consumption. Robust consumer spending will lead us out of the financial wilderness and avert a reenactment of the 1930s great depression.
On my local NBC affiliate in Baltimore— WBAL— the general manager broadcast an editorial Saturday night pleading with people to shop. While he urged responsible use of credit, he stated: “If you can shop you should. We must each do our part to get the economy jumpstarted. The message from Washington is clear—happy shopping.”
I’m sorry but if consumption without production is not a recipe for individual success, how can it lead to prosperity for all? If Americans saved, invested and then produced what they consume the argument might have some validity. But, as a nation Americans accomplish none of the above.
Americans buy lots of stuff that people in other countries make. For the first time since the great depression our national savings rate is quantified with negative numbers. And for all the trillions of dollars our federal government and large corporations have burned through recently, there appears to be nothing with future value to show for it. Our public infrastructure is crumbling along with our manufacturing base.
Consider Dan Rodricks' column Sunday where he observed: “Look at us: We've become a nation that thrives when people spend money they don't have. This is completely upside down from the society baby boomers recall, when the economy was robust, when people made a decent wage and benefits from manufacturing jobs, and the only things they had to finance were their homes and cars.”
The lesson from the economic crash of 2008 is that unchecked consumption and debt accumulation without production and investment in the future is unsustainable. All bills come due and all debt must be paid back. Shopping is not the magic elixir that will lead us to economic salvation; it’s an ingredient in the poisonous brew that’s killing our prosperity.
Joseph Ganem is a physicist and author of the award-winning The Two Headed Quarter: How to See Through Deceptive Numbers and Save Money on Everything You Buy
However, as the holiday season approaches and with it the annual nationwide orgy of shopping, we are told that the way out of the economic crisis is to keep up the behavior that made the mess. Black Friday sales figures are headline news. The media, politicians, and corporate executives spread a gospel of salvation through consumption. Robust consumer spending will lead us out of the financial wilderness and avert a reenactment of the 1930s great depression.
On my local NBC affiliate in Baltimore— WBAL— the general manager broadcast an editorial Saturday night pleading with people to shop. While he urged responsible use of credit, he stated: “If you can shop you should. We must each do our part to get the economy jumpstarted. The message from Washington is clear—happy shopping.”
I’m sorry but if consumption without production is not a recipe for individual success, how can it lead to prosperity for all? If Americans saved, invested and then produced what they consume the argument might have some validity. But, as a nation Americans accomplish none of the above.
Americans buy lots of stuff that people in other countries make. For the first time since the great depression our national savings rate is quantified with negative numbers. And for all the trillions of dollars our federal government and large corporations have burned through recently, there appears to be nothing with future value to show for it. Our public infrastructure is crumbling along with our manufacturing base.
Consider Dan Rodricks' column Sunday where he observed: “Look at us: We've become a nation that thrives when people spend money they don't have. This is completely upside down from the society baby boomers recall, when the economy was robust, when people made a decent wage and benefits from manufacturing jobs, and the only things they had to finance were their homes and cars.”
The lesson from the economic crash of 2008 is that unchecked consumption and debt accumulation without production and investment in the future is unsustainable. All bills come due and all debt must be paid back. Shopping is not the magic elixir that will lead us to economic salvation; it’s an ingredient in the poisonous brew that’s killing our prosperity.
Joseph Ganem is a physicist and author of the award-winning The Two Headed Quarter: How to See Through Deceptive Numbers and Save Money on Everything You Buy
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