The Financial Services Authority (FSA) is to instruct banks
to charge for current accounts, according to a report by consumer group Which?.
Research found charges for going overdrawn for two days per
month without permission range from £120 to £900 a year, leading to confusion
for consumers.
Customers who stay in credit also lose out through punitive
charges levelled on withdrawing money abroad.
A senior executive at the FSA told Which? regulatory
intervention may be needed to curb the problems arising from supposedly free
banking.
Which? chief executive Peter Vicary-Smith said –
“Hidden charges completely shatters the myth that banking is
free. The suggestion that banks should increase charges to avoid more scandals
defies logic and is a slap in the face for consumers who are being hit hard by
one of the worst financial crises in recent times. It's a disgrace that the
very people who bailed out the banks are being asked to pay more for the most
basic accounts, while the industry continues to be rocked by scandals like PPI
mis-selling, LIBOR rate-rigging and IT failures. Banks must be far more
transparent about their fees and charges so that people can clearly see what
they already pay."
Many European retail banks currently level a monthly charge
instead of relying on cross-selling or high hidden charges for income.
Peter McNamara, former head of personal banking at Lloyds,
told the Today programme if UK banks wished to operate a similar system they
would need to charge between £4 to £5 per month but felt the idea of suddenly enforcing or regulating some charges
on accounts is an extraordinarily unattractive one.
John Howard, former chairman of the consumer panel at the
FSA, said he was in favour of monthly charges for a number of reasons.
Customers do not know "what the real cost of providing
that basic banking service is", he said. "Banks have to be honest
with us about what it really costs to provide that bank account. Consumers are
immensely angry with the banks about everything that's happened, and the
typical reaction is why should we pay banks even more. But there are real
concerns that the regulator is trying to address, that free banking is creating
distortions in the marketplace.”
The current system may have created the climate that led to
the mass mis-selling of payment protection insurance (PPI), because effectively
it encouraged banks to cross sell products, and unfortunately we are all too
aware of what the by-product of that environment was.
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