A British Man's Take on Debt, Saving & Investing


American Banking v. English Banking 3

Posted on October 21, 2009 by Lee

There are a few interesting differences between the way English banks and American banks seem to function on a day-to-day level. I have been trying to decide which is best, but I have come to the conclusion that ultimately each has its good and bad points.

Overdrafts

In America, it seems to be quite unusual to have an ‘agreed overdraft limit’. Rather, a checking (current) account holder can have ‘overdraft insurance’, which seems to cover  short-term budgeting errors.

Overdrafts are abused in England; some people take them as extensions of their paycheck and routinely ‘live in their overdrafts’, to the point that a paycheck merely takes them back to £0, before they start downwards into it again. Some don’t even make it back that far up the ladder month to month.

Banks love this of course. The interest charged can be as high as 30-odd percent, or in the case of the HBOS group, £1 per day in lieu of interest. Add that up over the course of a year or more and that is serious money being thrown down the drain for what is nothing more than dreadful money management skills.

My agreed overdraft is £1,500, and the first £250 of that is interest free. I haven’t entered it since January, but it is handy buffer for budgeting errors. The £250 interest free part comes with the account that I have, but the additional £1,250 beyond that just grew over the years with my account; Every once in a while they would push it a little further. It seems to have finally settled at the figure it is on.

Peculiar to my bank there is also a facility beyond the arranged overdraft called ‘Personal Reserve‘. It’s a £500 overdraft after your overdraft. Horrible little thing, it costs £22 per day to go in it, but I suspect if you need it, then it is handy to have.

ATMs

Another thing I find peculiar about the American banking system is fees for using different banks’ ATMs. I have never been charged anywhere in the UK for using an ATM that didn’t belong to my bank – beyond those convenience stand-alone ATMs you find in small shops.

This could just be scale. The UK ‘grew up’ as one large piece of infrastructure, whereas America has been hacked together by different institutions in different states at different times. Or is it just one further method of extracting money from the unwary consumer?

Cheques

I have written precisely 1 cheque in the last 5 years – no kidding! Cheques are pretty much extinct here in the UK. Shops have all but stopped accepting them as a form of payment. Yet I have never heard of a personal banking customer in the UK being charged for cheques -  this seems ‘the norm’ in the US? Companies such as Checks In the Mail even seem to print cute designs on them.

Online Billpay

Various blogs extol the virtues of using this system, and if you’ve only had doing the cheques yourself as prior experience, then I can understand. But it seems lightyears away from our Direct Debit system. If the company you are paying isn’t wired into the bank, the bank physically print and mail the cheque? Amazing.

Direct Debit while appearing insecure on the outside, is actually quite brilliant. Take my credit card as an example:

When I got it, I ticked the box on the online account to set up the direct debit. I punched in my bank account and sort code, and set to pay £120 a month. Just this month, it’s now set to “pay in full”.  I could equally set it to “pay the minimum” or somewhere in between. The billing party then submits a Direct Debit request through the banking network, and my bank sends – electronically – the amount requested.

If anywhere along the line there is a screw-up, the Direct Debit Guarantee immediately resets the transaction. I can cancel the Direct Debit authorisation at any time from my Online Banking menu, and ultimately, it’s a stroke of genius.

About the only thing you cannot set up a Direct Debit for in England is your groceries.

Fees

It seems there are banking fees abound in America – even if you run your account right. A fee for even just having a checking account. A fee for checks. A fee for a debit card. A fee if you go over a certain number of transactions. A fee if you have less than a certain amount in your account. A fee for this, that and the other.

I am shocked by this. About the only fee I have paid in the last 10 years for banking has been the odd bit of interest for going into my overdraft here and there. I’ve never paid for cheque books, debit cards, the account itself or anything else.

Perhaps I am just viewing the UK system with rose-tinted spectacles, or the US system isn’t nearly as bad as some blogs make out. Or, perhaps, I’m spot on; in which case, for once, I am glad to live in the UK!

I’m sure at least one of my American readers will set me right soon enough if I have got it wrong. :)

sig

Blog Traffic Exchange Related Posts

Savings Roundup – September 2009 0

Posted on September 01, 2009 by Lee

A few weeks ago I decided to start looking into savings accounts properly. For the first time in 5 years, I will soon – I hope – actually have money to save after seriously paying down debt. If I’m totally honest, I was completely at a loss where to turn for advice, so I engaged myself on a rate finding mission. The credit crunch has brought the Bank of England base interest rate to its lowest since records began – yet there are still good products out there if you don’t mind rate chasing after the introductory offers run out. I’m not adverse to doing this, as it’s a small amount of effort for potentially, hundreds of pounds of profit a year.

After weeks of research, I’ve concluded and personally recommend the following:

Instant Access Savings - ING Direct are by far the best provider right now in terms of rates and flexibility. They are offering 3.2% AER (3.16%) on their standard savings account with no limits on access. After the initial 12 month period, the rate drops to an appalling 0.5% which effectively makes it a BoE base rate tracker. However for those initial 12 months, you’ll be doing well with ample time to reassess nearer the end of the introductory offer. Their online interface is amazing, and it makes it nice and simple to sub-divide your ‘account’ into pots for specific things.

One word of caution however: Don’t be fooled by their claim you can have an account open “in about 10 minutes”! It might take 10 minutes to fill in the online paperwork, but it takes many weeks to get it activated and ready for use! Believe it or not, this includes snail-mailing a bank cheque (cheques? I had to order a new cheque book just for this! How antiquated… but worth the effort).

If you’re not keen on ING, or want a better raw rate, consider Egg: They’re offering 3.25% again fixed for the first 12 months but with slightly less ‘zing’ in their interface. Egg are part of the Citigroup of companies.

Regular Savings Account – This is basically a product that gives you an incentive to save every month, usually from £25 to £500 a month. If you don’t make a deposit, then you get penalised for that month. If you’re able to keep it up for the year though, they can pay really well. Right now Halifax are offering 5% and win hands down against the competition.

Cash Mini ISAs – Finally, no savings roundup would be complete without mentioning ISAs. If you don’t have one this year, there is still plenty of time. It’s a tax-free way of saving, and at the moment the best rate seems to be the Barclays Golden ISA, paying 2.58% AER. If you’re new to saving like me, then fill your cash ISA first! It’s tax free and a great way to ensure the government doesn’t start pinching your hard earned pennies. Each ISA can hold £3,600 of cold hard cash, and you get a new one each year.

Most banks are paying around much the same rate at the moment, so to keep things simple check your own bank before moving elsewhere. For the sake of a few percentage points, it’s probably not worth the hassle of transferring any you have right now.

Found better rates? Tell the world in the comments!

Blog Widget by LinkWithin
Blog Traffic Exchange Related Posts


↑ Top