Is What I Experienced Called...
Body & Soul0 min ago
A friend of mine has been told by her employer that there are plans in the banking industry for the discontinuation of cheques.
I can't find anything on the web, nor can I see anyway that destroying one of the main ways small retailers have of taking money from customers would be a great move.
Has anyone else heard this, or is it a mad employer?
No best answer has yet been selected by whqttt. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The rumour has been circulating for years, In all proabbility, in the distant future, there will no longer be any cheques. The use of cheques has gone down a lot in the last 10 years due to the increasing use of both debit cards and payments by direct debit.
Eventually, cheques are bound to be stopped, but not quite yet!
There was a notice in the Vue cinema last weekend saying they no longer accept cheques.
It costs the retailer more to bank a cheque than accept a payment by debit card, so I suspect that cheques are on the way out sooner rather than later.
Loosehead, I'm told by work colleagues that it is fairly common for them to use cheques in the supermarket at the end of an expensive month... if they paid by debit card it would bounce immediately, but cheques take at least 3 days to process, which gives time for the pay to arrive in the account.
There are two other issues with cheques:
The first is the clearing process which can take up to 5 days depending on post. This annoys people. There is also the problem with counterfeit cheques - if I was to give you a cheque for some goods, you wait for it to clear (5 days typically) and tehn give me the goods. If it is a counterfeit cheque, it may be returned to you a month later (when the real account holder gets their statement).
The second issue is that an average cheque book contains 25 cheques and the 'normal' guarantee level is �100 - you could then report your cheque book lost and get a second book - ie someone can go overdrawn very easily an dvery quickly if they wanted to the tune of �5000.00 or possibly more, and there is nothing the bank can do about it. If it is by debit payments, they can quickly put a stop on the card!
Maybe it will be sooner.....