Originally posted by MrGongGong
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Cheques: does anybody still use them?
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostYou asked if I would accept it written on the side of a Jersey cow and I said that I would under certain circumstances. I'd not accept it on a banana, I'm afraid; sorry. You'd better go buy that cow and make the necessary transportation arrangements.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post
what's not to like about direct transfers?
Also, although the U,K, is perfectly entitled to go its own way, I can assure you that cheques are very much alive and well in France - without even a guranatee card (drawing a cheque if there are insufficient funds to meet it will ensure you are banned from holding a bank account for five years) so the cheque works well enough.
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Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostFor one thing, the fact that it presupposes both parties have online banking, otherwise the recipient will not know they have been paid until the statement arrives.
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostAlso, although the U,K, is perfectly entitled to go its own way, I can assure you that cheques are very much alive and well in France - without even a guranatee card (drawing a cheque if there are insufficient funds to meet it will ensure you are banned from holding a bank account for five years) so the cheque works well enough.
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Originally posted by JFLL View PostAnd if 1 billion cheques were written last year (#46), that ‘handful’ must have written an awful lot of cheques each.
In my experience, a lot of people don't use direct transfer and continue to use cheques because they don't realise how much more convenient the former usually is and have been used to cheques for long enough not to have thought to change; the faster payment system for BACS is a relatively new phenomenon (such transactions used to require broadly the same clearance time as cheques) but it's made direct transfers much more attractive since it's been available (sums above £10,000 are not yet possible via this means, however).
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostOnline banking is not a prerequisite for direct transfers; I don't even use it myself, actually. One can make such transactions by telephone. From my point of view, the idea that someone paying me will fund the cost of an envelope and a £0.50 postage stamp for the inconvenience of having to mail it to me and then I have to do the same to mail it to my bank makes it a hopeless case, frankly - and that's even without allowing also for mailing time (twice) and the risk of cheques being lost in the mail. The recipient of a cheque still doesn't know if he/she's been paid until the cheque clears and, unless a telephone enquiry is made of the bank, those payees also have to wait for a statement to find out.
Don't I know it! Until fairly recently, it was hard to use credit cards in many outlets in France but this is fortunately changing fast - and direct transfers are as possible in France as they are in UK (although I imagine that the bank charges will be higher). I always use a credit card where possible in France, just as in UK and I can now pay taxe foncière and taxe d'habitation online using a UK credit card. Pardon my saying so, but French banking is pretty expensive and punitive! I don't even have a French bank account and, although this is frowned upon by some, it's still possible to manage without one.
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VodkaDilc
Originally posted by ahinton View PostIn my experience, a lot of people don't use direct transfer and continue to use cheques because they don't realise how much more convenient the former usually is and have been used to cheques for long enough not to have thought to change; the faster payment system for BACS is a relatively new phenomenon (such transactions used to require broadly the same clearance time as cheques) but it's made direct transfers much more attractive since it's been available (sums above £10,000 are not yet possible via this means, however).
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Cavaradossi
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post
In my experience, a lot of people don't use direct transfer and continue to use cheques because they don't realise how much more convenient the former usually is .
I'm a bit fed up of folk telling me that some things are "more convenient" when they have no idea whatsoever what I might find "convenient".
Surely different things suit different folks ?
I'm currently in the middle of a project where teenage composers create pieces for a very well known orchestra , most of the work I do with them on the orchestration we do via the internet, emailing and using a shared space website etc BUT for some of them (and these are mostly 15 / 16 year olds who have grwon up with technology) the virtual connection does't work, so we meet somewhere and do the work face to face. It's much more "convenient" for me to insist that they ALL use Sibelius and email me the file and we work on it online BUT that simply doesn't work for everyone ..........
It's more "convenient" to substitute a piano for a harpsichord BUT it doesn't always sound right
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Originally posted by VodkaDilc View PostIt does seem difficult to persuade some people that we use cheques because we prefer them. I use direct transfer for a small number of regular transactions, but cheques for the vast majority.
Direct transfer is convenient in a very limited number of cases. Not for most.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post
French banking is pretty expensive and punitive!
As for "The recipient of a cheque still doesn't know if he/she's been paid until the cheque clears" - I would suggest dealing only with reputable people. I've held a U.K bank account for 47 years and have never paid in a cheque that didn't clear.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostA substantial number of them would, I imagine, have been "written" (i.e. issued) by large corporations rather than individuals.
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I wanted to buy a fairly pricey gift for Frau A. from Currys, but wanted to diguise its passage through out joint bank account. Without boring you with the details, I worked out how to do it by using a cheque rather than a card. The rigidity of the pen-pushers who run Currys (which should be Curry's) did not allow then to accpet a cheque, even though I was quite prepared to wait for it to clear. Clearly, they could not care less about their customers, but in taking this arrogant line, they lost a good sale.
I cannot be alone.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI don't suppose that the cheapness or otherwise of French banking figured large in your plans to decamp there at some time, ahinton?
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