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Balancing my check account

Balancing my check account

Posted Sep 14, 2005 15:08 UTC (Wed) by NAR (subscriber, #1313)
In reply to: Balancing my check account by lwn163
Parent article: The Grumpy Editor's guide to personal finance managers (Part I)

I do want a paper trail for most transactions, for reasons similar to why I want a paper trail for electronic election machines

I think you don't need checks for this. Even though my salary goes directly to my bank account, I get a quite detailed paper about this (which also includes the money that didn't get to my account, e.g. taxes). My bills are atomatically payed from my account and I get a paper from the electricity company, from the gas company, etc. When I pay with the debit card, I get receipts, just like when I get cash from the ATM. And I also get a monthly summary from the bank about my accounts on paper.

Bye,NAR


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Balancing my check account

Posted Sep 14, 2005 19:02 UTC (Wed) by smoogen (subscriber, #97) [Link]

The real idea about balancing a check account is really to keep a budget. This is something that doesnt seem to be taught or 'learned' by people these days as can be seen by the fact that people seem to just keep using the ATM card until it says 'no more money'.

Balancing my check account

Posted Sep 15, 2005 7:19 UTC (Thu) by ekj (guest, #1524) [Link]

Sure. But thats not the entire (or even the main) point of using an application like Gnucash.

The point is, to be able to make wise decisions about your finances, the first needed step is to *know* what your finances actually are. This doesn't mean only how much money you have, and how much you spent, but also what you spent it on.

Using Gnucash I can easily and quickly answer questions like:

  • How much did I spend in total for having a car this year, included deprecation, insurance, repairs, petrol etc ?
  • How much did that vacation in Cypern back 2 years ago actually cost ?
  • How have my stock, on average developed this year ?
  • Where did all the money actually go ?
  • Do we tend to have higher expenses in certain months ? If so, how much higher ?

Sure, you can answer all of those without a personal finance program, but it gets complicated and tedious. Especially when you, for example, own stock on an exchange where courses are given in norwegian-krone, pay fees associated with that to a brokerage wanting british-pound, live in and have most of your transactions in Euros.

Balancing my check account

Posted Sep 22, 2005 13:50 UTC (Thu) by sphealey (guest, #1028) [Link] (1 responses)

>> I do want a paper trail for most transactions, for
>> reasons similar to why I want a paper trail for electronic
>> election machines

> I think you don't need checks for this. Even though my
> salary goes directly to my bank account, I get a quite
> detailed paper about this (which also includes the money
> that didn't get to my account, e.g. taxes).

Consumer fraud / consumer protection laws are extremely weak in the United States, and in any dispute those laws greatly favor the entity with the most money and most political power. Which 99.99999% of the time is not the consumer.

Should you as a consumer end up in a dispute with a creditor or vendor of any type (particularly a financial institution), your _only_ hope is to have actual paper records of everything and to have sent every transaction via US Mail. As soon as you start bringing forth phone calls, e-mails, and electronic transactions as evidence the presumption of liability shifts to you and you lose. Guaranteed.

So while their is an element of conservatism in the continued use of checks/cheques, for those who are concerned about such things there is an element of self-preservation as well.

sPh

Balancing my check account

Posted Sep 24, 2005 6:21 UTC (Sat) by zblaxell (subscriber, #26385) [Link]

I've had about a 5% failure rate cashing pay checks. My bank is always ready to interpret "09/24/05" as "May 9, 1924" (despite the fact that the cheque has clearly labelled year, month, and day fields under the date area), resulting in the bank's refusal to honor the check. Handwritten checks have an even higher failure rate. In one case my check was stolen from the armored car servicing the ATM.

To date I have received every electronic payment on time, even in cases were major technical problems with the payment systems (either on my employer's end or at the bank) would seem likely to interfere. Hundreds of payments with no errors...just what I'd expect from properly maintained and supervised information systems.

These days I can barely avoid chuckling when I hand over an arbitrary piece of paper with no authentication beyond a signature to a bank teller...how could such a lame protocol actually work? Well, with a failure rate in the low double digits and an ongoing fraud/anti-fraud arms race, clearly, it *doesn't* work.

In the worst case, all one has to do is get the bank and the creditor/vendor on a conference call, read out the transaction confirmation number from your statement or electronic payment, then sit back and listen while they argue about where the money went.

So far it works every time. Usually what happens is that the creditor/vendor finally admits that their payment data is imported through a human data entry clerk, a fax machine, highly buggy third-party software, or by reading transaction details over the phone...or some combination of these. Maybe someone has typed in the wrong account numbers or the wrong amounts. Some companies have a 3-6 month (!) lag between accounts receivable and accounts billable. Sometimes, when the creditor/vendor finally figures out where your money went, you get to hear a meaty slapping, tearing, or rustling sound over the phone, as if someone is slapping their forehead or pulling out their hair.


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