Geoff wrote:<rant>
One thing in life that really bugs me is that bank cheques take *3* business days to clear!! I have just received a bank cheque from a Westpac bank...I have a westpac account - do you think it would clear immediately, even though the funds have CLEARLY been paid, the banks take 3 days to pay this!? This is, in my opinion robbery! Anyone from the banking sector care to give any kind of explanation as to why this is? The fat cat bank directors become richer as our money sits longer earning them interest while we wait for the funds to 'clear'.
it basically comes down to fraud.
i work in a credit union, we get emails almost every day about stolen bank cheques, medicare cheques, tax office cheques, etc.
essentially the clearance process is there to:
a. ensure funds are availible
b. ensure that the cheque has been endorsed correctly (verified sigs)
c. ensure that the cheque has not been washed... ie is cleaned of its initial payee / amount details and replaced with false payee / amount
d. ensure that the cheque is in date and written amount and numerical amounts match... sounds dumb... but i spent some time as senior teller and you'd be surprised how many dumb mistakes are made by tellers (ie accepting forward dated or stale cheques, or cheques with the written and numerical amounts not aggreeing...)
i can sort of understand the gripe you have with a bank for not accepting their own bank cheque. but it just comes down to fraud. with a 3 day clearance, it basically minimises risk of fraudulent cheques being paid upon down to zero.
having said that, the institution i work for will clear our own bank cheques, other bank/cu cheques, & ato cheques. it basically comes down to the size of the financial institution, and how much risk they are willing to take.
Geoff wrote: Yet...when we spend on our credit cards, the money is gone as soon as you've signed...it's just not right.
</end rant>
uuhhhhh not entirely correct....
with visa cards, your account is not neccesarily debited straight away. i can walk into a shop, spend $15 bucks, and it might not debit my account for a week or so. in fact, merchants have up to 45 days to debit your account.
for larger transactions, merchants tend to check your account for availible funds and restrict them so you cannot overspend.
we run into problems with this at work, particularly with visa debit cards (they operate using the same infrastructure as the visa credit card system). people often either:
-forget they diid a bunch of transactions, then they all pile up and come through at once... most people think that when you use your visa, press credit and sign the merchant checks for avail funds
or
-know the way the system works and abuse it when they dont have money.
either way they run into overdrawn fees. don't get me started on those! $10 a pop at my work, but i know at some of the larger banks they are $30-40!!!