Winstonm, on 2014-February-14, 23:49, said:
Not everyone who is poor bounces checks or has awful credit. Post office/bank will help some. There are others who it will not help.
Of course. I have never thought or suggested otherwise. But the problem still remains of who this is to help and how. I had not heard abut this initiative until you posted the article. I am not necessarily opposed but the more I think about it the more skeptical I become.
Questions that occur to me:
When money was very tight for me, I had a checking account and I deposited my check. I gather that, for those who don't bounce checks, this can still be done. So this initiative will help them how?
Is this initiative expected to help those who bounce checks or those who don't, and just how?
Here, for example, is a thought experiment. Suppose we agree that paying heavy fees to cash a check is something we would like to fix. How? People with a checking account don't need to pay, or at least don't need to pay heavily, to have their payroll checks converted to cash. The target clientele are, I guess, those who don't have an account. The second article you cited suggests that, for these people, this is because their past behavior makes them unacceptable to banks. Would the Post Office service allow them to open and to keep a checking account even if they regularly bounced checks? Or, if not, would they simply convert the check to cash and send them on their way, money in pocket? This latter would seem to involve having a very large amount of cash on hand on Fridays.
You don't have to be Milton Freeman to accept that there are reasons markets behave as they do. Before you attempt to circumvent this you need to evaluate these forces and have a plan for coping with them. Perhaps this is being done, but as of the moment I don't see it. Just saying that we will have the Post Office provide financial services is not enough of a plan.