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It's crazy what occasionally got passed through. I remember a VP complaining about a failed deposit - the cheque image was a completely unintelligible scrawl of blocky black pixels - like white noise on an old TV. I explained why it got flagged by the software and that it wasn't eligible for deposit. They didn't care - uploaded it to the bank who happily cleared it for them with funds available instantly.
It's all about how big a customer you are, you're perceived risk profile and your relationship with the bank.
First, there's the "pay by depositing to a debit card" racket.[1] "The biggest issue is the hidden fees. Some providers charge cardholders for common activities such as receiving paper statements, over-drafting, replacing cards, transferring money to another account, making withdrawals at most ATMs, and even not using the card for a period of time."
Then, there are things such as DailyPay.[2] This combines payroll, a debit card, and payday loans into one convenient fee-laden package.[3] Worse, not getting paid means trying to reach the intermediary's customer support.
[1] https://www.thebalancemoney.com/what-are-payroll-debit-cards...
[3] https://www.needhelppayingbills.com/html/daily_pay_services....
Sure, back in the day of couriers carrying checks, it made sense that it might take a few days to know. Today, with the internet and electronic presentment, theoretically the whole system could be transparently replaced with one that can clear the vast majority of checks in seconds.
Banks could offer checking accounts to even the least creditworthy people simply by not extending them any credit.
Many of the rules and regulations have come about because writing checks became a non-local thing. You'd send off a check to pay for a magazine subscription and it'd get processed somewhere far away, like South Dakota. They don't know who you are, so like the article said - writing a check became an extension of credit, and the writer needed some verification as to their creditworthiness.
I'm extremely confused about the usage of the word "need", and the implication that this need for the line of credit is what generates all these downstream problems.
The person depositing a check wants the money soon, sure. And the check bouncing or not depends on the person writing the check. The person depositing the check "should" "just wait"? Like don't extend the credit? Credit card processors hold onto your money for this exact sort of reason!
Yes, there are trust considerations. But don't move money that is not quasi-guaranteed? Pay for money flow? Make the trust relationship between banks and not between atomic actors? Risks are risks are risks but saying that people should be unbanked because their checks will bounce... I guess it's weird to have these pieces of paper have so much trust associated to them in the first place?
Maybe the check network doesn't work as well in this model. Fraud is a whole thing as well of course. I guess in this model people trust checks enough to allow groceries to be paid by check. Just feels extremely suboptimal.
https://www.npr.org/2017/01/10/509126878/what-is-driving-the...
Account or not.
I don't really care of it's AI or not. The picture is just strange. The empty hoodie just standing by the window, watching a worker who is seemingly undisturbed by it. The odd placement of the desks, the fact that all of the text is gibberish, but looks just close enough to real that you pause to examine it. Except for the big "CHECK" on the wall, which isn't something you'd actually see in a real establishment that cashes checks.
More and more, I see companies using art that they would refuse to pay for if a contracted illustrator turned it in. Seemingly because it's AI, it's like they become blind to how bad it is.
After hours of phone calls, I learnt that bank account numbers are recycled (!) after accounts are closed.. so the previous owner of my account number had tried to cache a cheque using a legitimate chequebook that they still owned.
Still amazes me that the system could be so insecure!
I nodded along whole-heartedly into the digression on banking and class in America. When you actually think about what's going on in these places, it's a wonderfully curious twist on our idea of "trustworthiness".
Though I wonder whether you could just get an account where your deposited checks just take a while to clear (when the bank actually has the money)? And where any attempt at overdrafting would just fail?
Basically, a bank account where the bank does not extend you credit. A purely 'pre-paid' affair.
I guess the kinds of people who would want these accounts are on average not good customers?
(I know that they have these kinds of accounts in eg Germany where I grew up. But your average German is averse to taking on debt; so you just get average Germans signing up, instead of the adverse selection you'd have in the US?)
It has always confused me how simultaneously the US money system is operating in the most advanced interconnected economy imaginable which fosters innovation (bankruptcy laws in the US are designed to make it easy to try again, they encourage entrepreneurship) and yet.. the whole credit union, banking crash, over inflated economy has made them retain unbelievably archaic approaches to money on paper.
Checking for forgery, active forgery presumably underway, 3+ day clearing, "you're not from round here" risks, It's just insane.
Go to walmart, buy a stored value card, you can do dollar events with zero friction but present a cheque at the counter, and you're in the slow path.
It's positively ... Indian. It's like mainstream Indian bureaucracy levels of insane slowness. It's even had films with Whoopi Goldberg made about it (she is a cheque processor in some movie, doing it by hand at a 1970s vintage cheque processing machine. I think its "made in america" with Ted Danson)
since you're comfortable making a jab like that, would you mind linking me to specific passages that the Harvard lady failed to cite in her work? the whole scandal is so buried in surface-level coverage that i legitimately cannot figure out what she failed to cite.
They have to manage that somehow beyond a reputation system. Part of it might be the legal system - I believe check fraud is seen as more serious, with much higher penalties, in many countries, specifically because the system of checks wouldn't work without it.
Besides that, I don't think they actually eat at McDonald's much. Their relationship with fast food is that they work there.
I found myself nodding along to a lot of the contents of this article, but I totally disagree with this part... it runs totally counter to my experience. To be fair, maybe my experience was the exception that proves the rule (or maybe things have changed since I worked front-line at a financial institution), but the expectation that you would be cold or unwelcoming to a customer (or prospective customer) based on class or perceived class was absolutely not the case. Like, I cannot stress that enough. Don't get me wrong, there were procedural safeguards such as "no checking account if you have <650 FICO", but you were expected to be welcoming to everyone who walked in the door and "they seemed poor" would certainly not be an acceptable excuse for snubbing a customer.
> In the case where [...] the government later comes to the conclusion that it didn't really want to pay them
If the government comes to that conclusion, and has a legitimate reason (e.g. you didn't do the work they paid you to do), they should have ample ability to take you to court to get the money back. By making the payee cover this risk, they're essentially paying for the untrustworthiness of other payees.
Fact check: so false, as to call in question the author's good faith.
TL;DR: Check cashing exists because banks don't want to deal with people who deposit checks with a high risk profile (whether due to fraud or lack of funds by the payer). Unsurprisingly, this risk gets priced into the product.
Dealing with bounced checks from such people often involves behavior that most of a bank's customers would consider somewhere between impolite and disturbing. Also, many consumers of check cashing do not have state issued IDs and may not be up for dealing with KYC checks.
The situation has gotten somewhat better for low income people in that government benefits are delivered electronically, without needing to cash a check and some emerging electronic payment options may improve it further.
Of course, I don't try to pay by check in a store. (Though I did write about a $30K check when I bought my last car and that wasn't a problem either--assume they have back-end systems to verify.) Getting rid of checks just isn't a problem I care about or want to devote any mental bandwidth to.
Also, yeah, this looks like a weird bank / accountant's tax office pastiche, not at all like a check cashing place.
It's patio11 though, all of whose writing on the nuts and bolts of finance are fascinating, so it's easily forgiven, heh
Edit: in fact I'm already 3 paragraphs in and so fascinated by the, typical for patio11, high level of detail combined with easy novel like readability, that I almost feel guilty for having piled on to criticize the awful AI image. But still, yeah, I agree AI images like this are actually worse than no illustration at all
[0] https://www.canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency/services/...
Even crazier, the merchant initiating the ACH had been refusing to cancel my subscription and my bank recommended just closing the account as the fix for that at the time. Partially because I wasn’t using it actively, I think there were other ways this just happened to be the simplest. But it didn’t work because of said reopening of account.
Also, the merchant got $0 as it was NSF. But bank charged a couple $35 fees IIRC causing the negative balance. They really didn’t want to waive them and I ended up talking to like 3 layers of management to get it resolved. I was just like, “of course it was NSF how/why would I leave a balance in a closed account? Why don’t you reject the ACH some other way? Your business logic is fucked up”
As I was a broke student with few options, I ended up having to default on it, which did wonders for my credit rating for a good long while.
That's like......every normal bank account? At least in Poland, UK and Germany(as you mentioned). By default you don't get any overdraft, you can't go below zero so to speak. If you do(with an offline transaction that wasn't authorized live with the bank) then usually you get 24 hours to pay it off and start paying heavy penalties beyond that point.
Cache invalidation is hard.
For example, in this issue, a major reason why some people don't do value transfer through banks directly is the banks don't really like them (for reasons), the feeling is mutual (for reasons), and other people who do not have the same POV re: banks want to give those people money in a scaled fashion, which (unless they orient their operations around a solution) will frequently involve sending out checks.
Ironically India has a very significant amount of transactions cashless/electronic, pushed by demonetization and later covid. The government has been pushing hard for it for a while and I think they succeeded.
slowness is a feature, not a bug, in some social situations. Most modern Americans have not experienced that kind of situation. One of the elements missing here is control - who has control over the transaction, and what are the practical methods to resolve dispute.
Cash is not great at scale perhaps, but it is great for the individual in times when trust is gone, where there is unequal power relationship, and where there is real corruption inserted into ordinary transactions.
As an American with some knowledge of history, I support cash, paper checks, and electronic transfer. without a doubt.
When this feeling occurs, why is the next step "wow the US sucks" instead of "there must be some good reason that I don't understand."
Practice has shown the two to be inseparable, presuming you mean artistic value rather than market value. They inform each other. Furthermore, no valuable idea or piece of art can be owed to a single person.
There are already 400 participants who have signed on in less than a year of the network being live [3] (the list includes Chase Bank and the US Treasury), and the CFPB is already getting in front of financial institutions attempting to charge insufficient funds fees for instant payments when unnecessary [4]. There are substantial entrenched interests fighting it (The Clearinghouse and their competing private RTP network, credit card rails, etc) due to the revenue at stake (~3-5% of the economy running through this FinInfra), but as long as the infra uptake continues and it isn't sabotaged by policy and lobbying, it will deliver more efficient value transfer at scale. Also helps when merchants surcharge credit card rail payments when cheaper alternatives are enabled.
Tangentially, the unbanked stand at ~4.5% in the US per the Fed [5]. That should be driven to as close to 0% as possible, which instant payments contributes towards (getting funds to recipients faster with less float and necessitating less or no credit extension, depending on use case).
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36801491
[2] https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...
[3] https://www.frbservices.org/financial-services/fednow/organi...
[4] https://www.pymnts.com/news/cfpb/2024/cfpb-proposes-banning-...
[5] https://www.fdic.gov/analysis/household-survey/index.html
[6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_Payments_Interface
[7] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pix_(payment_system)
(humorously, you mention it's very "Indian" when UPI [India's instant payment system] is probably the gold standard success story [6] alongside Pix [7] in Brazil)
The what? I don't know what you're getting at with this.
> Checking for forgery, active forgery presumably underway
I learned just last week that forged cashier's checks are a risk, which you can get burned by even if your bank makes the mistake. Forged Cashier's checks! Insane. The whole purpose of those is to ensure the money exists before issuing.
I do vaguely remember the 80s and there was a fair bit of cheque usage along with those credit card duplicator things where the sales person takes an imprint of the card. Wild times!
In America, it's not like Indian bureaucracy levels of insane slowness.
> One of the reasons I covered the checks as a payment method recently was to lay the groundwork for talking about some of the fascinating alternative financial world around them. In the main, this helps people at the socioeconomic margins turn payroll and other checks into cash (or otherwise immediately spendable value) in return for a fee. This is not how you, reader, probably deal with checks, and the existence of this industry / product have been controversial for many years.
So what's funny is that the topic is actually totally alien to me. But that's because I have only ever dealt with one or two checks in my life (when interacting with an American company paying interview expenses). And otherwise, I've never handled them at all. They just have been out-of-use in my parts of the world (Europe, Singapore, Australia) for at least as long as I've been economically active in them. From what I've heard, the US is going in that direction as well? So many younger people would have never handled checks there either?
But the paragraph just assumes that you would be familiar with checks in general, but not with check cashing. (Later on in the article, our author explains the basics of how well-enough-off people handle checks. So that's fine.)
Edit: reading further down, I'm ok with the tone of the article and don't share the concerns.
> Compassion gets burned out of the owner and burned out of the clerk in basically the same ways that it gets burned out of everyone else in the neighborhood.
This reflects a false belief that people who live in poor neighborhoods are less compassionate. In fact research suggests that people living in poverty tend to be more compassionate towards each other than rich people are toward the impoverished. It's comforting for wealthier people to hold this belief, because it makes us feel less bad about our own lack of compassion.
And the point of the below paragraph seems to be that it's difficult or unpleasant to think about systemic injustice, so let's avoid it?
> And, not to put too fine a point on it, it’s really hard to expressively, passionately hate this business and not hate the young lady working in it, the decisions and life challenges of its customers, and similar. And if you hate one particular building in a poor neighborhood, and then start rigorously thinking about the liquor store, or the police station, or the supermarket, or the church, or the public school, or the home in the poor neighborhood, I think your mind will start going to some pretty dark places.
I ask because there is, as far as I can tell, no obvious way to do it. You could just as easily write an essay talking about carrier-provided phone financing, and it would expose a similar cultural rift where most Americans don't do that and are only very vaguely familiar with how it works.
Or is the glaring thing that you dislike here the clearly stated assumption that most of the readership is not like you? In which case perhaps we should simply request that authors not state such assumptions while they make them anyway in the interests of being maximally informative.
Technology was supposed to reduce these barriers, but in a lot of ways it has magnified them, creating a new pseudo social caste system or perhaps just an extreme shift in the existing order. Noticing that the promise of the 1990s has fallen flat they turn to blind pushes for inclusion as an embarrassed justification for their position in this new order.
So the author is being anti-inclusive by defining precisely what they are talking about? I assume you've seen the XKCD about "15k people a day dont know what X is", you're committing the same elitist reasoning, that someone is an idiot for not knowing a thing.
In late 2023 FedNow was introduced, which should facilitate exactly that. But it's optional for banking institutions, and the US is riddled with small institutions that cannot or will not volunteer their capital to invest in the tech required.
Often if you really need to do that, you’re better off taking the check the bank it was drawn on, often having to open an account there first. Still can take quite awhile.
But before computers and electric communication, this was the best and fastest way, and since the vast majority of transactions are legitimate, it works.
Pratchett’s Going Postal is a decent look at the system.
I use one of them.
Is their existence being hidden from people? I just googled "bank with highest interest rate" about a decade ago and the top result was a bank that ALSO had no fees or minimums their accounts.
Would you bank somewhere that held your payroll deposit for 6 months?
Same way that a country that never had anything before now won’t run copper telephone wires, and instead go directly to fiber backboned wireless.
I presume they do some basic checks, but it’s really all down to trusting it’ll all come out eventually.
They’d much rather have a check than 30k in hundreds.
There is no “final clearance”. The owner of account can notice fraudulent check and report it months later, and it gets reversed.
> And then there’s one decision which I just love aesthetically: if you’re willing to wait ten days, Ingo will discount your fee straight to zero. Why ten days? It is past the window where fraud discovery will result in the funds being clawed back plus (ahem) a bit of annoyance tacked on as a product decision.
Like, the article's good enough that it doesn't need an image. Or if you really think you need it, grab some free stock photo or clipart or something.
Or get good AI art. Don't settle for bad AI art.
I wouldn't consider Germany to be avant-garde of banking in any sense.
Huh? Why? Isn't the USPS a mail company? I don't get what that has to do with banking.
To me, the biggest issue here is simply "banks should not recycle account numbers".
IME they eventually end up abusing it (repeatedly not paying the fees) and then the bank closes their account, at which time they move on. One way they strategically avoid or delay paying the fees if they can't / don't want to is by avoiding direct deposit. Then, you can either deposit the check (ready to pay overdraft fees and get account positive) or cash the check at a check-cashing (for a fee that will likely be less than the overdraft + overdraft fees).
Transfer most of the money to the savings account and then when getting declined buying food top up the card account and rely on it instantly being available. Having negative trigger each time going above the pre-planned spending for the month.
Hell, I still do it. I have one card for groceries which gives me a mental picture of how much I have spent on food given what day it is when it gets declined each month.
I would presume this comes from being the generation that grew up only knowing about debit cards. Most got a personal one at the age of 13 or so and never really used cash. Guessing it is even earlier today.
Didn't get a credit card until first time I was planning to rent a car when travelling knowing how much easier it would be.
No. Every normal bank account can go overdrawn. Try it: low value purchases or withdrawals are not transactional (they are eventually consistent).
(Imagine a business that occasionally mails random people $10.48 without asking them first.)
They are exceptionally rare, to the point where many people have never seen one and fintech/neobanks simply don't support them at all. Unfortunately, some organizations/businesses do use them. They're particularly popular when some entity is required to pay you, knows your postal address, doesn't know your bank account, and doesn't care about your satisfaction with them. They just mail you a check and are done with it, making it your problem. As a bonus, they have a good chance of not having to actually pay you because you don't want to deal with the check or forget.
Of course, there is no electronic deposit either.
And while I'm talking about German companies above, US companies of course absolutely love doing this for the same reasons, meaning you have a foreign, USD denominated check. Hopping on a flight to New York and going to one of these check cashing places might be the easiest way to cash these, and could be comparable in cost to trying to do it locally.
I remember with some clarity the moment that Chase Bank suggested that a letter of reference from my bank in Canada might ease matters and they'd just hold my check some extra time for their troubles. And I thought: I don't need to continue at this bank. There is a better than even chance that I can find a bank that treats me better than this.
That's what "you're not from around here" looks like.
In some places its "keep money local" and in others its probably confidence they won't be left holding the baby in a scam.
UK check guarantee cards helped solve some of this by security pantomime.
I have a neighbor with a hobby of accepting and depositing forged cashier's checks from people who want to "buy" a car from him or do some other scam. He knows the checks will be counterfeit, so he leaves the money in his account to cover the the deposit and the $5 returned check fee. Then he posts them here:
Domestic checks barely exist either, the only way you'll ever see one is if the government owes you money for some reason but you haven't told them what your bank account number is.
When I moved to a new place, I couldn't pay for anything with a check because I still had my old address printed on the checks and most stores wouldn't accept checks with an out-of-state address printed on it. This was ~18 years ago, so things may be different.
I don’t doubt that you can reduce risk by e.g. using novel infrastructure which looks up the account number on the check then uses (for example) a debit card network to check the account’s currently available balance. However, even if you were looking at someone’s balance on their mobile app while they were writing the check to you, that would not suffice to guarantee that the check would not be returned as NSF. The bank can choose to NSF it for a variety of reasons, for example if they prioritize “today’s” debit card transactions over “today’s” checks in the posting order, or a check previously deposited (and included in that available balance) gets NSFed and yanked back by another bank.
Anecdotally, I wrote a check to my landlord yesterday, because a few months back they claimed they never got the automatic bill-pay from my bank, and my bank said it was already sent, and weeks later my bank said the recipient refused to take it... Anyway, no party was ever able to tell me why an automated process that worked unattended for months suddenly stopped working for no discernible reason.
Note that a bank not allowing overdrafts (e.g. by returning checks NSF if the account has insufficient funds for them to clear) does not guarantee that an account will never end up with a negative balance. In particular, you might deposit a check which is later returned (as NSF, or as being fraudulent) and not have enough money in your account to cover the check at the point when it is returned -- hence Patrick's point that checking accounts require the bank to extend credit even if the only thing you ever do is deposit checks.
At the time, I switched to one of those high interest low fee online banks. They still charged overdraft fees, but they were lower. I had actually tired to create an account there initially, but was rejected due to lack of credit. I had to create a credit union account checking account first to establish some credit before the online bank would do business with me. Note that I'd had savings accounts at a national bank and the credit union previously, but that wasn't enough.
I just checked and my local credit union still charges for NSF, but the online bank I use does not.
The existence of lots of smaller banks, credit unions, and not to mention a bunch of huge online-only banks like Ally and Schwab somehow just doesn't register.
Essentially, it's a "stupid tax".
As for the benefits I just alluded to, they are in no particular order:
* Simplicity and security. You cut someone a check, it's effectively the same as handing someone a wad of cash but without the logistical, security, and social issues associated with handling wads of cash.
* Convenience. Checks are easy to use and require nothing other than a pen compared to other forms of transferring money, such as wire transfers or debit cards.
* Assurance. Cashier's checks are a special kind of check guaranteed by the underwriting bank. These are often used when large sums of money need to exchange hands with no hassle or problems (eg: real estate or vehicle purchases).
In fact, for a few years now, overdraft is legally required to be opt-in:
https://www.fdic.gov/resources/consumers/consumer-news/2021-....
Explicitly stating unfounded assumptions about your audience doesn't change the fact that they are unfounded assumptions. A whole hell of a lot of people in our country have relied on check cashing services regularly at some point, and believe it or not, many of us read blog posts just like them proper folks from polite society.
https://www.propublica.org/article/the-expendables-how-the-t...
Do you think this article is ineffective?
I was speaking from personal experience within a cultural context, so your perspective doesn't apply. Whether or not you've relied on paper paychecks in the US has far more to do with socioeconomic status than age.
From what I recall, its less that the poor are more compassionate, instead they participate in _reciprocal altruism_ as a form of insurance against further loss. I remember this talk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AchISJUKfH4 -- poor people make seemingly dumb decisions because if they don't help their social network when it comes knocking, they're in effect _cutting themselves off_ from said network.
The middle class is more insulated from this effect because those with emergency savings don't often need to borrow $500 because of a broken car or need to house their recently homeless sister and children, so capital can accumulate more easily.
Could you create your own paper checks? I think you can, as long as it looks/feels like a check and has all the info on it in the correct places. You don't have to use any security features to prevent check washing (but it's a good idea). You don't even need the magnetic ink, as the check will be optically scanned, with hand-processing as a fallback (they will attach a MICR correction strip).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnetic_ink_character_recogni...
Suppose a business or individual accepts checks and electronic funds transfers for payment.
Are they going to apply their prior probabilities (your various -isms such as racism, etc), in regards to whether or not the payment will actually be successfully received?
Whereas an instant payment and confirmation via the use of internet and databases alleviates this motivation to discriminate.
I expect they will just become obsolete slower in the USA than other parts of the world.
Personal cheques are already obsolete in my country (New Zealand). And their usage looks to be sharply declining in European countries: https://www.statista.com/statistics/443677/cashless-payment-... or countries are trying to stop their usage (UK, Australia).
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1055578/check-usage-by-c... implies that the USA likes checks. 30 years ago NZ had over 50% of transactions by cheque.
Yes, checks have important benefits but the downsides (fraud, processing costs, credit risk) lead to them becoming uncommon and then obsolete in other countries. No reason the USA will be different.
Moreover, a similarly sympathetic (and horrified progressive middle-class-assuming) portrait of a check cashing business and its customers would almost certainly read as incredibly condescending to someone who finds them a fact of life. The article quite clearly assumes its readers have never been temps, never been crammed into a van to work in a warehouse, and will be upset to learn the conditions in question. It just doesn't say so briefly, opting instead to bury the assumption.
Do you want to read an article that portrays your younger self as a victim so that readers can feel bad and maybe learn about the financial structure of check cashing? At the risk of making a large assumption, that does not seem like it would help you feel included.
You don't care because you're an issuer, and a net beneficiary of retention of the funds in your control for those extra days of clearing.
I wanted an account that would not give me any credit. I did not want any credit.
But I also wanted the bank to do the mental arithmetic for me, and just refuse when I don't have enough funds. Instead of me having to carefully track my balance manually, lest I accidentally use any credit I don't want to.
(For context: I usually try to keep my liquid balance fairly low, and stick the rest into savings and/or investments.
It's ok for me, if a payment bounces every once in a while because of that. It's all about trade-offs. I can usually fix it pretty quickly by transferring some money from my savings account, or from my brokerage.
With an account that helps me there, by not offering any unwanted credit at all, I can manage my finances a bit more aggressively, instead of having to keep up some safety cushion against arithmetic mistakes on my part.)
See also https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39201675 for how that non-overdraft account works in practice for people who don't want to take on credit, but also don't want to have all their money in their 'checking' account.
I still don't use a credit card for that. I have a debit card that's part of Visa, so most businesses don't care whether it's debit or credit.
That's exactly what I would want to use, if I had to use checks. (Luckily, I don't ever have to interact with checks.)
Banks in Denmark are obligated to extend a basic account to all customers and usually do it with a debit card. Ie. no offline transactions and no transactions that can not be immediately cleared.
I don't know why you dismiss this. If you are from the US then be aware that EU and US banking systems are wildly different (where the US system is really good for the wealthy people).
If you are from EU, then it sounds like you haven't changed your banking situation or stayed up to date in at least 15 years.
This is only applicable to the unbanked, for the most part. Regular banks make funds immediately available when a check is deposited. Unless you're already on their radar for kiting.
Uruguay is another economy which has gone all-in on cashless, shops and cafes had to offer 10% discount for card transactions when I was there 8 years ago, the idea was to beat out the tax-avoidance.
At every scale from muggings to home robbery to retail store robberies up to bank robbery and knocking over armored cars, cash handling imposes a security and risk management burden, with a particular component of risk of physical violence that is much less of a factor in electronic security risk models..
Or perhaps you're saying which one to use depends on what you want? But if there's an unequal power relationship, the person with more power (probably the payer) will usually choose. So to fix that, it's not enough for cash to be an option, checks need to not be an option. (Electronic transfers can be an option, as long as they're set up so that the payer can't unilaterally take the money back.)
PayPal was around $290 / share in August 2021. Now $63 / share. Their business got larger in that time, not smaller. The market is front-running the end of the necessity (or general usefulness) of services like PayPal in the US. The stock is back to where it was in 2017, when PayPal was a far smaller business, and it's now trading for 14 times operating income. They better find a new, large business, fast.
Catching up with 54 other nation states really sums it up. That flywheel has been revving up since 1871. Slow start.
And yes, it is unfair to compare US financials to Indian bureaucracy in the wide: Indian financials are innovative. They "got" money early on.
You see a lot of people outside of the US try to talk about the US while having zero first-hand experience or real knowledge of it. It's very common behavior on HN and it's very common behavior on Reddit. They just repeat what someone else said as though it were automatically true.
On the flipside, they are one of the most ubiquitous ATMs in Japan and your local post office will double as a branch for JP Post Bank (which are everywhere).
Oh and it's nation wide too! Which is kind of important for a country where some banks restrict activities and branches to their direct locality.
Man. I wish patio11 would talk about Japanese banking more because to most American audiences that system is also just, completely something else.
Problem is most business checks are written against business banks.
* Banks don't want to do business with these particular people because they know them to be a bad business risk. They often know, via credit reporting methods, that the specific individual human standing before them has a history of cashing bad checks/committing fraud/whatever it is. Therefore, they decline to work with that person.
* The people who are bad risks for banks get rather tired of dealing with banks, both because constant rejection is tiresome and because bank employees make it very clear (though unspoken explicitly) that they are persona non grata there. By contrast, the people at the check cashing shop treat them better, so they would rather take their financial business there.
I get why you want the explanations and not just "for reasons", but both of these points are quite clearly spelled out in the article. So I don't really think the author deserves the grief you're giving him in this case.
The problem is poor people would need to pay for their bank (as banks need to make money other ways and from the middle class that will be credit cards and mortgages etc.)
I guess I was doing it to service providers rather than stores though - most stores would much rather have had a card payment even back then.
The main thing Zelle gives us normal plebs is the ability to pay via routing numbers to businesses without incurring fees.
Possible before, easy now.
All financial infrastructure is a patched-together collection of systems spread across multiple different firms made of multiple suborgs with vastly different levels of observability into and understanding of their local part of the total system. For many routine problems, the cost of having a rigorous answer to “What just happened?” is far, far greater than the dollar amount at stake in the transaction. You’d need the equivalent of a federal agency doing an after-accident investigation to make headway, at the cost of millions.
So we chalk it up to gremlins and move on, for better or worse. (This is one reason why financial institutions have an operational losses budget. Sometimes the gremlins eat someone’s money. So you just charge it to Ops Losses and move on.)
My town charges a premium for tax payments on the web because they outsource it. So, yes, I pay by check.
They recently tried to personalize their debit cards though, which caused them to stop being accepted by some merchants, since they're no longer identified as Visa (even though they still are). I now have to use ACH transfer for certain purchases, where debit used to work just fine...
They apparently did this for tap-to-pay support, which is so not worth it because who still buys things in person? Who would want to sacrifice the ability to make online purchases for that??
Convenience: will be superseded by FedNow. Is already superseded by various apps.
Assurance: cashiers checks aren’t really relevant to this discussion. They’re not the same as a check, they might as well be a different product entirely, and they generally cost money to use for everyone except those who have fancy high value bank accounts.
Disagree about the security. I just found out last month how unsecure the use of paper checks actually are because they expose your bank account & routing number.
I had an old checking account that was dormant and I hadn't written any paper checks against it for 10 years. What then happened was a landscape service asked me for payment for some work so I had my credit-card ready to settle the bill but they surprised me by saying they would charge extra 3% fee for processing the card. However, they said there was no fee if I paid by paper check. I didn't want to pay hundreds extra in fees so I used that dormant checking account to pay them with a paper check. They cashed my check the next day and I didn't think anything about it.
About a month later, I saw a mysterious "e-check" that subtracted money from my dormant checking account! It was not ACH; it was a generated e-check from a billing service popular with adult companies. So somebody from the landscaping company used the numbers on the bottom of my paper check to generate a fake digital check. The thief was on a website that let you pay for a subscription by creating an echeck; the web form would have fields for entering anybody's bank routing # and account #. (Example: https://solutionscout.com/payment-processing/e-check/)
When I talked to Bank of America about the fraud, I asked the customer service representative if there was any security setting that would prevent fake checks like that from deducting money from the account. He said "no". The fake e-check even had a totally bogus check # that was out of sequence with my real checks and he said their system doesn't verify the sequential #s. Literally, you're powerless to stop it and the only thing you can do is let the fake e-checks steal your money -- and then later file a fraud claim hoping to get the money back!
Paper checks are flawed with a critical security hole by letting companies generate fake e-checks. This means the more paper checks you write and release out into the world, the more of your banking surface area is exposed for you to become a victim of fraud.
And a big downside of checks is that it reveals your bank account and routing # in an ACH system where money can be “pulled” anytime from your account. Compare to an electronic money transfer system where money is pushed from entity to entity using a unique identifier, but can’t be “pulled”.
Though I was surprised a couple years ago when I bought a new car. I thought I'd have to run to a bank branch to get a cashier's check to pay the balance (as I've had to do in the past). They were fine with just a personal check. I assume the finance guy had some means to verify I had the balance in my account.
If you want to check my 'poor people credentials': I grew up on welfare in (mostly former) East Germany. Nowadays I live comfortably as a programmer.
Poor people don't use checks in Germany. Some rich people might (still) use them for idiosyncratic reasons.
I had this happen to me 25 years ago with Wells Fargo. I was on vacation and had a check drawn on the branch I was standing in front of - and foolishly thought it easier to cash it right the and there than wait to get home and deposit it. Boy was I wrong.
I’d also done this once or twice as an actual child in the early 90s and then it was not a problem.
Example: https://www.barclays.co.uk/current-accounts/basic-account/
I assume the debit card is configured to refuse offline transactions.
This is combined with the fact that no account supports cheques anymore.
I've never been told cash, but if I was, I would be happy to pay in cash.
Basically, I wanted the German experience where your transaction is just declined, if you don't have the funds, without further repercussions. In the UK, the banks might or might not approve that transaction, and definitely charge you an outrageous fee either way.
The only choice on offer in the UK at the time was whether you pre-arrange an overdraft, which is slightly cheaper (but still expensive). Or whether they give an you an 'unarranged overdraft', which you can't not accept, which is crazy expensive.
- A portion of the check is made available to the casher (said to be "cleared", but not really) before the writer's bank even responds
- After the writer's bank has cleared the check, it can still reverse the transaction and take back the funds. For example, if the check is found to be fraudulent.
So, for example, you can deposit a check into your account, wait a month to be sure it's cleared, take the money out, and then have the money "taken back"; leaving your account in the negative. As such, even for accounts that don't have any "line of credit", the bank still winds up "lending you money". Effectively, EVERY bank account in the US has credit built into it in some way.
In most cases you mean the former.
“Not a thing” is a confusing idiom. It specifically means never happens, ever, but the idiom is frequently used in contexts where hyperbole is expected, so a literal translation accounting for the hyperbole might be something more like “I’ve seen it once, but it’s vanishingly rare”.
(I don't have a credit card.)
There’s no other department of the federal government with that coverage.
They also are quasi financial already as you can get a USPS money order.
It could also be pressure on American banks to treat their customers better, since the USPS is not burdened with a responsibility to generate dividends for shareholders.
The USPS is also not directly funded by taxes (though it is indirectly subsidized via it's tax status and sole right of access to mailboxes), and with the waning popularity of letter mail, would become more self sufficient in the long term if it branched out into other services
Other countries also combine banking and postal branches for similar reasons, like Japan (although it is in the process of being privatized).
In my own experience I have negotiated sales or contracts with others for non-trivial sums. It feels like most modern people are just going along with systems that require an intermediary and working devices. I feel it is not only important, but crucial, to have the ability to negotiate directly with a peer or others. That means without electricity or cell phone coverage, too. YMMV
Auteur theory exists for good reason. Good art cannot be imagined merely in the mind, only self-flatulating bullshit can. One must engage and prove and iterate and exercise all the unlikely leaps that must be made to go from medium to meaning to detail. Image generators are just shitty art directors and neither is practicing art.
Good riddance. Come for Visa and Mastercard next. $57B in combined revenue in 2023.
They had to compete with banks and Zelle, and did fine. I think Zelle is doomed.
"By number, checks declined at a rate of 7.2 percent per year since 2018, dropping to 11.2 billion [in 2021]."
That's about 35 per person per year.
It seems to be around 1.2 billion in France (17 per person), around 100 million in Italy, and much, much less in the other EU countries.
Overall for the EU excluding France about 0.25 per person.
https://www.federalreserve.gov/paymentsystems/fr-payments-st...
https://www.statista.com/statistics/443677/cashless-payment-...
This wouldn't even be an issue if America didn't still rely on the utterly archaic check scheme for transferring money.
That does not universally eliminate "you're not from around here". Anecdotally, some banks will fingerprint people who show up with a check from that bank if they don't already have an account at that bank.
What systems to handle it?
The cashier puts the check under the cash tray like you do for $100 bills, and then you toss the check in the cash bag that you send to the bank that night or at the end of the week or whatever, and the bank handles the check.
Most Ontario Canada credit unions (and maybe others) just badge an internal provider's UI for their websites and online banking.
I've had worse experiences with a big bank (and Canadian banks are massive) that once forced me to update their app. Then when I went to something I used to always do, schedule a future bill payment, it just said "coming soon". Ughhhhhhh.
Paper checks are useful, if you have various accounts with different banks. You can write a check for yourself to move money around.
Even mailing personal checks is not secure, as they are stolen. Even postal employees are involved in this [1].
[1] https://www.nbcnews.com/news/postal-worker-3-charged-24-mill...
1. Deposit check 2. Funds are made available to you 3. You withdraw the funds 4. The check is later marked as fraudulent and the payer bank attempts to claw back the funds, with your account balance at zero
You don’t need to spend millions of dollars engineering an electronic solution to this problem, you just need a legal agreement between the broker and the landlord allowing the broker to accept the deposit on the landlord’s behalf. That’s not exactly a stretch.
I don’t even know my current landlord’s name, to be honest. It’s on the lease, but my deposit and rent go to the management company that maintains the building.
Not sure what good that would do. I keep a few checks in a travel folder and have a couple pads of checks in different places around my house. I don't necessarily write checks in sequential order.
Yes, they're not very secure. It's also a system that generally works pretty well for a lot of people. And, yes, it's a good idea not to keep an excessively large bank balance for a variety of reasons.
The amount of trust people are willing to place on a piece of unauthenticated paper is astonishing.
I don't assume that.
Every dealership has their own policies. My guess is nonpayment on personal checks for car purchases is such a low occurrence that they are willing to take the risk of just assuming that the check will clear. Plus they also (in my state anyway) register and title the car on behalf of the DMV so they have all your information.
When I bought my car I said I needed to move the money into my checking account before I wrote a check. It was from the same bank so it was instant but they replied "no problem - do you need us to hold the check for a couple days then?"
This, combined with the fact that welfare must be paid by bank transfer in nearly all circumstances, means that a) essentially everyone in the UK has a bank account and b) cheque cashing isn't really a thing. Some banks have an account-opening service specifically for people with no fixed address and/or no identity documents.
From a UK perspective, the situation in the US just looks like a completely avoidable policy failure.
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/63f7bbd78fa8f...
https://england.shelter.org.uk/professional_resources/no_fix...
That's the first time I've ever heard that assumption, and I live in the UK - basic checking account(with no overdraft) is just what everyone has by default, if you want credit you just apply for a credit card - that's my experience at least.
Seriously, I don't think people in this thread appreciate just how practical and efficient pix is. Adoption is essentially universal across the population, and we are talking about a poor country.
But I agree, the traditional banks have had a hard time getting up to speed while new banks seems to see it as a way to handle their liability: At Revolut scale you can not manage individual customers with negative balance while offering the service at a competitive price point.
Also, saying that those people messed up in their financial management is sort of blaming their poverty on them, while we can't know (in general) whether that's their fault or not.
It still will be for as long as many people cannot get and maintain a free bank account that is usable for transferring funds via whatever scheme you envision replacing checks. And the property that checks have, namely that some percentage of them get unwound for various reasons and that percentage varies substantially by customer, is very hard to get rid of. As long as that property exists, access to a bank account that provides that mechanism will be an extension of credit and thus not universally available.
It's possible that a system for instant payment clearance, like FedNow, might reduce the problem of insufficient funds and similar clearance issues. However, that doesn't eliminate the possibility of bad/fraudulent/etc checks, just reduce it.
The belief must be that credit cards will retain their utility (purchase protection being one), both in the US and globally.
I would expect Visa's extraordinary margins to get damaged by FedNow.
one surprising use of a check is that one could write five checks, each with an amount and further away date.. e.g. dated the first of the month for the next four months. Those checks are now a reliable source for a loan in cash, since you signed each one. there are many other examples..
Even when cheques were used here, they often wouldn't accept cheques and would insist on cash because they didn't want the hassle of cashing cheques especially for such relatively low value transactions. Maybe if you were redoing your heating system they might take one, but a maintenence callout? Nah.
Zelle? 2k+ banks and credit unions support it.
There is very little incentive for these large vendors to innovate so their software tends to feel 2 or 3 generations behind the bigger banks (or even more so the innovative credit unions).
I'm not sure actually. This one is a total piece of crap in terms of UX. It feels like it could easily be the subject of a TDWTF article.
For example, if you delete any messages from the "secure messaging system", it will pop up a modal dialog after they've been deleted, solely to state that the messages have been successfully deleted. These modal dialogs appear everywhere, for basically every possible reason. It is as if toasts or even notification bubbles have been intentionally avoided, in favor of these constant incessant dialogs. You can't even dismiss any of them with Esc.
Even the loading spinners are modal dialogs whenever you switch pages. And either nothing is cached, or the only way to refresh the cache is to reload the entire dashboard.
There is a fake loading screen every time you load the dashboard, just to show you ads. There's no corresponding backend request that it's waiting for the completion of, it's just a timed wait.
And they constantly run email advertising campaigns about scams and phishing that I can't unsubscribe from. (Thank Firefox Relay for letting me block these)
> Most Ontario Canada credit unions (and maybe others) just badge an internal provider's UI for their websites and online banking.
I haven't used more than a couple banks. AmEx Serve didn't have even a remotely similar UI, but I'm not sure if that's even a credit union. I might switch back to them once I have a job, since their fees are not bad, they were just nonzero which I couldn't afford back then.
> I've had worse experiences with a big bank (and Canadian banks are massive) that once forced me to update their app. Then when I went to something I used to always do, schedule a future bill payment, it just said "coming soon". Ughhhhhhh.
I usually just prefer automatic billing, but I haven't yet had to deal with rent or utilities, so that opinion may someday change. Just curious, is that an option for you, or perhaps is there a reason why you don't use it?
Yes, I understand that scenario where the checks are not written in exact sequential order by the account holder -- nor are they presented to the bank for clearing in exact sequential order by people trying to cash them.
However, when the last real check I wrote is sequence #3374 and the fake e-check hitting my account is sequence #1687557289469, that's an arithmetic difference of 168 billion checks!
We're not talking about a fudge factor difference of +/- 50 in check numbering because real people write paper checks out of sequence. We're talking about basic sanity checking for fraud. E.g. Do bank account holders typically write billions of checks such that the simple subtraction of 2 different check sequence numbers is billions apart?
Here's the crazy part... The Bank of America website UI for online banking already visually warns you when it detects a out-of-sequence check # gap! It just doesn't use that existing logic to stop payment on an obviously counterfeit echeck.
There are kinds of check fraud people get away with it, but none of them involve legal names and an address to send a summons to.
Most people have an ordinary account like this one: https://www.barclays.co.uk/current-accounts/bank-account/
However, the general situation for overdrafts seems to have changed since I left the UK — I don't know the details: https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/jan/28/uk-banks-ov...
The banks presumably make a loss on these accounts, at least in the short term, and seem to hope you'd give up and try with a different bank.
A Bulgarian guy in a flat share was keeping his money under the bed as he had been turned away by the banks. I printed the "Basic" account information and with that in hand he had an account the next day.
(This might all be 10-15 years out of date.)
There are a variety of systems in many countries, the key difference with Pix is that it is very modern and relatively mobile-first. There are not many other such systems in the world yet. How easy is it to pay without a phone? Or without internet? I regularly make payments in places where there is nearly zero cell signal.
Pix charges fees, too, to merchants.
Is Pix guaranteed to be supported by every bank? The mandate certainly doesn't seem to require it, but I'll take your word.
I think the reason that people in this thread don't appear to "appreciate just how practical and efficient pix is" is simply because it's not very relevant. Sending and receiving money isn't particularly annoying in the US. Nor is accepting payments (merchant fees aside -- that's a whole different topic that I am sure patio11 has explored). I am sure that if Pix or something like it was widely available in the US, folks would be singing its praise too. But it's not particularly compelling when most people aren't even aware that something is or could be lacking in the current system.
This usually meant the customer would need to call up a service centre, who would arrange a ‘planned overdraft’ of sorts, still with zero fees, but it would allow them access to a portion of their funds and we’d do the same again the following week and so on.
Very inconvenient for all involved, these people are often completely financially illiterate (and frequently just illiterate) and have zero clue how to manage their bank account. I tried to educate them consistently, but week in week out I had the same conversations with the same people when they didn’t understand how they had no funds available to them, even though they’d been ‘paid’ that day.
At the end (around 2017 or so), I got a Monzo account, and was very happy with them.
First: this situation does not happen in EU. Alle restaurants have connected handheld devices.
But when an EU citizen go to the US and pays? I reckon that the restaurant would have a check that bounces and won't get paid.
Mastercard/Visa is a huge thing here in retail but PayPal is really niche. No app leveraging the instant wire transfers is getting much traction. The network effects are huge and the card fees apparently aren't that high.
https://www.narmi.com/insights/getting-real-about-real-time-...
> Zelle is an example of a P2P option, but with one major difference from those outlined below; its transactions can be cleared via The Clearing House’s RTP rail. If both the payee and the recipient use banks that leverage the RTP rail, the transaction will settle instantly. If not, it will typically settle in a matter of minutes. Since users can send money to recipients outside of their bank and the funds settle in real-time (or nearly), it is considered to be an open (rather than closed) loop payment.
> Notably, Zelle has seen massive growth since its launch in 2017 and is now available to nearly 80% of the U.S. population, with adoption by over 1,600 financial institutions. Similar to The Clearing House, Early Warning Services (owner of Zelle) is privately held by 7 major banks.
https://danakivis.medium.com/the-state-of-faster-payments-in...
You're acting like this is some kind of futuristic concept. Are you not aware that everyone in every other country manages just fine without checks? They're only used in the US. If I went to my bank now and asked them about "cashing a check", they'd probably look at me like I had two heads. They simply don't exist.
“There's no particular reason why this kind of financial intermediation should be a $100 billion industry, rife with inefficiencies.”
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36012866
https://www.axios.com/2023/07/22/fednow-instant-payments-cre...
https://www.usbank.com/corporate-and-commercial-banking/cfo-...
https://www.moderntreasury.com/journal/bank-payments-as-a-cr...
No, I'm not. I'm well aware of how other countries operate, as well as proposals for upcoming systems in the US.
I'm observing that the article we're currently discussing talks about multiple sources of issues with checks, and immediate-clearing electronic systems solve some but not all of them.
Immediate clearing systems eliminate NSF issues: a check will never bounce, it'll get cleared immediately or rejected immediately. This is a great thing and I'm looking forward to it. It'll be a massive reduction in fees and hassle for many people.
Immediate clearing systems do not eliminate the problem of the purported originator of the check disputing/rejecting/etc the check payment and the originating bank clawing back the payment. There are any number of reasons for that, some of them legitimate. The article mentions some of them, and there are more.
I am not making an argument against immediate clearing systems; on the contrary, I think they're an incredible good idea. I'm observing that they are not, in fact, a panacea that on its own will completely eliminate the reasons why people are unbanked or underbanked.
So a valid check is presented to my bank with sequence number N and cashed. Another valid check is presented with sequence number N+10000 and refused. So now I've got to pay a fee to the second vendor for the returned check, they probably won't accept a check from me now so I've got to pay with a credit card and there's a decent chance I'm paying 3% more for that pleasure. So the bank trying to be helpful just cost me $25-50+3% and has done nothing to prevent actual fraud from occurring - I would not be using that bank for very long!
The guy at that landscaping company already committed a bunch of felonies, it's computer fraud, bank fraud, probably one or two others. Not sure what the bank wasting its efforts trying to combat this would accomplish.
Even the US government requires cashier’s checks, not personal checks, for passports.
>Worst case, they take the collateral (house, car) back and get to sell it again.
Worst case is the asset gets trashed or stolen and not recovered, and the seller spends a ton of time and money in court to find out the buyer has no assets to recover from.
Edit: I was wrong about the US passport needing a cashier’s check. It was probably for a travel visa, so a different country requiring it.
Receiving a fake cashier’s check, or the opposing party hacking into your bank and showing a transaction that will disappear?
Regardless of how unlikely the fake cashier’s check is, a fraudulent electrinic money transfer is still more unlikely. And the electronic transfer is cheaper (free). And less work for everyone.
When I last used checks (about 30 years ago?), my sequence numbers would vary by that much because I used them to encode metadata about the check. Only the last 3 digits were actually a sequence number.
I appreciate the thought put into the answer, and I do grasp that the point is that the EU system has converged on much faster resolution times than the US and different social systems based on that etc. There just always are tons and tons of weird edge-cases (what if you get a court-ordered transaction reversal or order to the bank somehow etc) that lead to the same "you're overdrafted, and you have to pay up and then pay a fee..."
Oh, why? Because they actually wait for it to clear. Zero fraud then.
In the US you seem to like living with options for fraud.
[1] https://repeater-builder.com/molotora/gontor/25120-bw.pdf
that is absolutely false IANAL
It would prevent me from losing my money! I filed a fraud claim form that also required an affidavit with notarized signature and Bank of America still won't return the stolen money. That money is gone.
>The system you're envisioning whereby banks refuse payment on otherwise valid checks based on Reasons seems a lot crazier.
My point is that BofA computer systems already have some aspects of "suspicious activity" algorithms and heuristics in place to prevent counterfeit checks stealing funds from the account. The banks are already "wasting effort" as you put it to try and distinguish real vs fake checks. E.g. When the landscaper tried to cash my legitimate check that had my handwriting and my signature, the bank sent me a phone alert which I then had to explicitly approve. Otherwise, they would reject the check. (An example of "Reasons" as you put it.) This is what the verification alert that requires explicit approval looks like: https://imgur.com/a/62dCsBx
But the next check a month later that someone faked, with a weird sequence #, without any signature, and the "payee" to a company notoriously known for unauthorized checking account withdrawals and fraud... No alert for my approval was sent; instead, they just went ahead and paid it.
If the banking system allows 3rd parties to fabricate e-checks with no verification, they should also offset that dangerous power by allowing account holders the security tools to stop those types of echecks from being cashed. E.g. a smartphone approval step.
As far as I know the only way to execute an immediately-settled electronic transfer is a wire transfer, which is inaccessible to lots of people and has an associated fee for nearly everyone else.
This must be a new policy - I wrote out a personal check for my passport.
Note that, when we're talking about a fraudulent cheque, and it being clawed back, it's already been cleared by the source bank. As such, there is no longer a difference between the check and a real time debit.
Even if your bank sends the cheque for collection and waits for the payor bank to confirm there’s funds there.
The cheque could have been stolen and forged, or a legitimate cheque could have been altered. There’s even an example up-thread of a bank recycling account numbers. The owner of the bank account it’s drawn against can take weeks or months to notice that the fraud has happened, and when they do the transaction can be unwound leaving your bank liable to return the value of the cheque.
When I used to deposit US cheques regularly in the UK, I’d be offered the choice between “negotiation” (we assume the cheque is good and will pay it this week) and “collection” (we’ll send the cheque back to the US and only pay you when we collect the money weeks later), but in both cases there was language on the form making it clear that they could pull the money back up to years later if something went wrong.
There’s literally no way of implementing cheques—-or most other payment rails—-without someone, somewhere choosing to extend credit and deciding to take on that risk.
As someone who was previously a customer of Bank of America and suffered my own form of theft and fraud (I was pickpocketed and someone used my debit card illicitly afterwards before I could cancel it). I can tell you with an absolute certainty that your experience is very specific to Bank of America or large national banks generally and not any sort of rule or law.
Do yourself a big favor and close your accounts with BoA and join a local/regional credit union. Nearly a decade after my first incident, I had another issue and the experience and how I was treated by my credit union vs how BoA treated me were worlds apart.
Either one will require an affidavit, the credit union offers members a free notary service at any branch so I simply filled it in person at a branch. The affidavit is to protect the bank by ensuring you are liable for false statements. The credit union also helped me pressure the police to actually do something, which resulted in three arrests of a group of teenagers that had more than 800 stolen cards in their possession when arrested. And I had the stolen funds returned to my account the same day at the branch, good as cash.
In that interim decade I stopped carrying a debit card and only used credit cards because of how badly my experience with BoA was. I now know that it’s not the card you use, it’s the /bank/ you use that makes the difference.
And Zelle obviously has a lot of limitations, such as being for smaller amounts of money so not useful for down payments or such, I was referring to checks versus electronic payments as a concept in general, not the US’s specific implementation. Which there isn’t one, but due to political failure, not technical limitations seeing as how every other country has the capabilities.
Tbh I think you can still pay by (local) cheque even here but you need to go to the bank and sign something in blood to get them. And not sure if anyone actually takes them any more.
They may have been used for B2B with 30-60-90 day payment terms 15-20 years ago.
they say a Federal Bank can do that. I was talking about contracts between private parties (see above)
Zelle transactions are subject to reversion or cancellation ... for days?
Compare to, say, settlement cycles in SWIFT: https://www.swift.com/news-events/news/preparing-t1-global-i...
However there is possibly some new "real-time payment" feature of the ACH network that could be equivalent to wire settlement, but I'm not sure Zelle actually uses it.
You can't just unilaterally reverse a Zelle payment any more than you can a SEPA transfer.
There's also FedNow[2] but I don't know of any retail implementations yet.
you neglected to say "bank" .. you said it as if anyone can do it. Look at what you wrote