Greece
Orders Banks To Record "Personal Data" On Anyone Who Was
Hoarding Cash
22
March, 2015
Over
the course of documenting the ECB’s push to phase out the €500
note, we stumbled upon something rather interesting that’s taking
place at Greek banks.
Courtesy
of a reader, we learned that Piraeus Bank (among others) has begun
charging a fee to exchange large denomination bills for small. The
charge is listed as 0.15% by the bank and Kathimerini would later
report that across the Greek banking sector “exchanging one
500-euro note for smaller bills, [will cost you] 3-5 euros (depending
on the bank), while the maximum charge comes to 200-250 euros
regardless of the amount a customer wishes to exchange.”
This
is amusing for two reasons: 1) the ECB effectively
gets to charge for the privilege for banning large billsand
2) it means that if you are Greek and you were effectively forced to
take your money out of the bank because after last summer you feared
a depositor bail-in might be right around the corner, you now have
the distinct pleasure of having to pay a fee to exchange your large
bills for smaller ones at the very same banks where you withdrew the
money in the first place.
The
entire effort to eliminate the €500 note is set against the
backdrop of a larger push to phase out physical cash. Without
physical cash, there is no effective lower bound as
citizens cannot resort to banknotes and coins when interest rates
fall. Rates then, can go as low as the central bank needs them to in
order to facilitate consumer spending and thus centrally plan the
economy.
Of
course central banks aren’t going to come out and say that. The
official reason given for eliminating large bills (and sooner or
later small bills too) is that it reduces crime.
If there’s no cash there will always be an electronic record of
transactions which presumably would deter criminal activity unless
criminals resort to payment in-kind or otherwise devise an underworld
barter system.
Implicit
in all of this is the notion that if you are in possession of large
bills you are probably a criminal. Sometimes, that’s true. Take the
two men who were arrested this month at the Madrid airport with
€200,000 in €500 notes rolled up in cigarette packs, for example:
But
other times, you might be in possession of large bills for other
reasons. Like say the central bank has cut rates to zero and you’re
afraid that soon enough, the bank won’t be able to sustain its
margins so it will pass along NIRP to you. Or say the
troika threatened a depositor bail-in and you’re afraid they’ll
do it again, so you took all of your money out of the bank and put it
in the mattress.
Unfortunately,
even if you do have
a good reason (not to mention a right) to be in possession of large
amounts of cash in high denomination notes you’re going to be
treated like a criminal, and it starts in Greece. As Kathimerini
reports,
Greeks who attempt to exchange €500 notes for smaller bills will
now have their
transaction and personal data recorded by the bank.
Here’s more:
Commercial banks are being ordered to note the personal data and transaction history of clients who exchange 500-euro notes, along with cross-checking the details recorded with other transactions by those customers, according to a circular issued by the Bank of Greece.
The aim of the measure – on top of a commission charged by banks on the exchange of 500-euro banknotes with smaller ones – is to prevent money laundering, which experts believe to be behind demands by certain bank clients to exchange bills of high denomination.
Kathimerini
goes on to note that "Greece ranks among the European Union
countries with the highest circulation of paper money, amounting to
25 percent of the gross domestic product, while the average in the EU
is below 10 percent."
And
we're sure that's part of the excuse for the "record keeping."
There's 2.5X the amount of physical currency in circulation in Greece
as the rest of the EU, therefore there must be more criminals.
It's
as though The Bank of Greece (or, more appropriately, Brussels) just
can't seem to figure out why there
would be more cash in circulation in Greece as a percentage of GDP
than in other countries. Allow us to help solve that mystery for you
Brussels: it's because you tried to rob Greek depositors last year.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.