bogarde73 wrote on Aug 3
rd, 2015 at 2:28pm:
Sir Grappler Truth Teller OAM wrote on Aug 3
rd, 2015 at 12:31pm:
bogarde73 wrote on Aug 3
rd, 2015 at 10:51am:
Sir Grappler Truth Teller OAM wrote on Aug 3
rd, 2015 at 10:45am:
When they charge you to draw your money out over the counter - why would you go in?
It's clear what their intent it - to get rid of as many employees as possible. I do surveys and I always make the point that in any out of the ordinary transaction - I go to the branch.
See, this is where I disagree with some of you.
You're coming at it from the angle of "their intent" to get rid of jobs.
I'm coming at it from the angle of you can't fight what the market dictates.
Not that I like to see people lose their jobs, any more than I wanted King Cnut to get his shoes wet.
Hardly what 'the market dictates' - the banks are doing just fine right now, thank you very much, so it comes down to a matter of choice....
Are they prepared to keep people in paid employment and thus keep the wheels of the economy greased - or would they prefer to transfer their costs to machine maintenance, from which a few will prosper but many will not?
THAT is what the market demands - either employ people to generate the opportunity to develop revenue - or dump those people and hope for the best.....
Guess which will win out in the long run...
But what you are saying is that the banks should keep a lot of low traffic branches open when clearly the evidence is people want to do their banking online.
Who does that benefit? The relatively few people who remain employed? They will probably get so bored they will leave anyway or they will feel their jobs are insecure and leave.
Who does it disadvantage? The rest of the bank customers, because obviously costs are higher than they need to be and so fees will be higher than they need to be.
The banks' shareholders, because profits will be lower & that flows on to lower dividends. I know we are talking marginal effects here, but everything adds up.
The thing is, what a business does has to reflect what the customers want. You just can't get away from that.
Lots of people prefer a bank nearby - and they get a chance to commune with the staff who they've probably known all their lives.... "G'day, Mary - how's the kids? Still married to that bloke what threw a stick atcha in first grade? He's a larrikin, that one.. but a good worker!"
Bank fees shouldn't come into it - the concept of bank fees was introduced to cover the costs of ATMs and such - and has grown out of all proportion. My view is there should be no bank fees - with a start being none for pensioners and social security recipients.
Like cheap trade with China for cheaper goods - as I said then - it's one thing to have cheaper goods available, but entirely another to have no choice but to buy them. The direct outcome of that is that a Sidchrome spanner costs much more now.... due to volumes of trade .. and thus the impact is double from cheap imports being virtually the only game in town.
Translate that to banking - it's all right to have online banking available - and remember the banks encouraged that with fees for over-the-counter transactions (many such may have been dropped now that the effect has taken hold - there ya go for proof) - it's entirely another to have no choice.
Also online banking for many raises the spectre of insecurity of their information - not too unfounded when you supposedly secure internet connection can be robbed occasionally by some twerp out there who downloads masses (happened to me last week, and has happened before) through my phone (apparently) when I've never once used it for internet.
Where there's a will there's a way and that is one reason I keep several accounts - so that at least one will be preserved from intrusion, just in case. I can instantly change my pension and wages inputs to another account if I so desire.
Many people do not do that, and so remain wary of internet banking.
Anyway - closing banks is a pain also due to the lack of personal contact. People prefer people to machines.... ask any Woolies or Coles buyer...