Banks don’t want people in their offices because banks don’t like people, they love their money. Therefore, they make plans to reduce the flow of people and then close the branches. This year I spent the summer in a town where until recently there were two entities. There is none now. The population of this place is quite old, so the disappearance of offices causes inexplicable inconvenience. Why? Why? Because banks are required. You can’t tell the electric company to come and collect the bill from your house, they won’t even let you go to the company’s headquarters and pay it. The person is obliged to carry out these transactions through the bank.
The bench is required, but the bench is not.
No more than X amount of cash can be paid to prevent money laundering. It has to do it through a bank.
The bench is required, but the bench is not.
You can’t tell your company to pay your payroll in cash in an envelope. You have to get it through a checking account.
The bench is required, but the bench is not.
It was as if we were forced to perform rituals, but the churches did not exist. The Bank is a very powerful church that compels us to attend its services and to which we have to confess every day, but its ministers appear and disappear at will. The bank is there when it needs you, not when you need it. The last time we bailed out the bank, it cost us tens of billions of euros and not a cent of it was returned to us.
The relationship between users and entities is so asymmetrical that they should free us from having to depend on them. I recently tried to pay cash for a funeral home where we were ready to mourn the death of a loved one, and they wouldn’t accept the money. They told me to pay by credit card (death on credit). However, my card was not authorized for such a payment, so I knocked on the bank’s door but there was no one inside. Our burial is almost sold out. The bench is required, but the bench is not.
Source: Informacion

Ben Stock is a business analyst and writer for “Social Bites”. He offers insightful articles on the latest business news and developments, providing readers with a comprehensive understanding of the business world.