Bank Fees? Let’s Tell the Banksters That We Don’t Want Their Stinking
Bank Fees and That We Are Switching Banks
Economic Collapse
Blog
Millions of
Americans are about to get stabbed in the back by their banks. Bank
of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citibank and several other
large banks are either already implementing outrageous new bank
fees or are currently testing them. So are these ridiculous new
bank fees going to be enough to get millions of Americans to finally
boycott the big banks? When millions of Americans start paying a
$5 fee every month to use their debit cards and when millions of
Americans start paying a $20 fee every single month just to have
a checking account hopefully that will be enough to wake them up.
These fees are certainly not going to cause an "economic collapse",
but they are incredibly annoying. The truth is that the big banks
are trying to take advantage of us. It shouldn't cost $60 a year
just to use a debit card. It shouldn't cost $240 a year just to
have a checking account. What we need to do is to send an unequivocal
message to the big banks: we don't want your stinking bank fees
and we are switching banks.
When I was
growing up, I remember how banks would bend over backwards to get
your business. The customer service was generally very good and
banks were not gouging us with ridiculous fees.
But now thousands
of smaller banks have been gobbled up by the banking giants and
things have dramatically changed. The big banks don't value us anymore.
They seem to believe that they have a "captive audience" and that
they can treat us however they want to.
Well, it is
time for us to draw a line in the sand.
We didn't mind
so much that they were paying us next to nothing on our savings
accounts.
We didn't say
too much when ATM fees soared into the stratosphere. For example,
the average cost of using an "out of network" ATM in America today
is approximately $3.81.
We didn't even
object too much when they started charging us fees for things such
as getting paper statements, receiving wire transfers, or closing
our accounts.
But now they
have really crossed the line.
On October
1st, new federal regulations went into effect that capped what banks
can charge merchants for debit card transactions.
The average
fee on a debit card transaction used to be about 44 cents.
The new federal
regulations cap the fee on merchants at 21 cents.
So will banks
be unable to make money under these new regulations?
Well, according
to U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, each debit card transaction costs the
banks somewhere
between 4 and 12 cents.
So a cap of
21 cents is not going to kill the banks.
However, it
is going to hurt the profits that they have been making. The new
rules are expected to reduce total bank revenue by a whopping $6.6
billion a year.
Ouch.
So what are
the big banks doing about it?
Well, they
have decided to recoup that revenue by sticking it to us.
For example,
Bank of America recently announced that it is about to start charging
a $5
per month debit card fee.
This has sparked
a firestorm of criticism.
Even members
of Congress are getting involved.
According to
ABC News, U.S. Senator Dick Durbin stood on the floor of the
U.S. Senate this week holding up a plastic debit card and launched
into a tirade about Bank of America....
“Bank
of America customers, vote with your feet, get the heck out of
that bank,” Durbin said on the Senate floor. “Find yourself a
bank or credit union that won’t gouge you for $5 a month and still
will give you a debit card that you can use every single day.
What Bank of America has done is an outrage.”
But that is
not the only outrageous fee that you will be hit with at Bank of
America.
If you want
to get a basic checking account at Bank of America you will be slapped
with a $12
monthly fee unless you maintain an average balance of at least
$1,500.
Other large
banks are instituting debit card fees as well.
Starting in
November, SunTrust will be hitting account holders with a $5
per month debit card fee.
Last February,
J.P. Morgan began testing a $3
per month debit card fee in Wisconsin.
Wells Fargo
has also been testing a $3
per month debit card fee in certain markets.
But it is not
just new debit card fees that are getting people upset.
For example,
according
to CNN large numbers of Citibank account holders will soon be
paying a 15 or 20 dollar monthly fee if they do not maintain very
high balances in their accounts....
Starting
in December, customers who hold its mid-level Citibank Account
will be charged $20 a month if they fail to maintain a minimum
balance of $15,000 in their combined accounts. Previously, account
holders had to carry a minimum balance of $6,000.
At the
same time, customers who have the bank's EZ Checking account will
start being charged $15 a month if they don't carry a minimum
balance of $6,000.
They know that
the vast majority of American families cannot afford to keep $6,000
sitting around.
It almost seems
like the big banks are trying to eliminate as many small accounts
as they can.
In the old
days, virtually anyone could get a free checking account, but now
all that has changed.
Sadly, the
era of the free checking account seems to be ending. According to
a
recent survey by bankrate.com, only 45 percent of all checking
accounts in the United States that don't pay interest are still
free. Two years ago that figure was sitting at 76 percent.
All over the
nation, monthly fees on checking accounts are absolutely soaring.
In 2010, the average monthly fee on non-interest checking accounts
was $2.49. Today, the average monthly fee on non-interest checking
accounts is $4.37.
It is almost
as if the banks don't even care about our money anymore. They don't
want to give us free checking, they don't want to send us paper
statements, they don't want us to use tellers and they don't even
want to treat us with common decency.
The truth is
that we are the ones that deserve some compensation for all of the
lousy service that we have been receiving. For example, the Bank
of America online banking system has been down for
five days in a row.
The average
American family is barely scraping by right now and cannot afford
all of these outrageous fees. Right now, economic
conditions are rapidly deteriorating and millions more Americans
are falling into poverty every year. It is absolutely disgusting
that these big banks are trying to drain hundreds of extra dollars
a year out of each of us.
Well, perhaps
we need to start voting with our feet. We need to tell the banksters
that we don't want their stinking bank fees and that we are switching
banks.
There are lots
of credit unions and small community banks that would be more than
happy to have us as customers. Yes, banking with them might not
be quite as "convenient", but the big banks have pushed us way too
far this time.
These new bank
fees are beyond outrageous.
We cannot allow
them to do this to us.
Reprinted
with permission from the Economic
Collapse Blog.
October
6, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 Economic
Collapse Blog
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