tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1541468051247516447.post1519466496887646707..comments2024-02-19T05:18:27.849-05:00Comments on <center>the Q at Parkside</center>: Hamilton BluesClarkson FlatBedhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13463744536115119388noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1541468051247516447.post-49982849692079863432010-11-15T14:12:10.136-05:002010-11-15T14:12:10.136-05:00Another fee-dodging technique, in addition to gett...Another fee-dodging technique, in addition to getting cash back from merchants: switch to an online bank that reimburses you for ATM fees. You have to make deposits by mail, but since we don't have banks in our neighborhood anyway it often ends up being more convenient. After years of being mad about the cost of ATM fees you incur by living here, I closed my wachovia account and opened one with Charles Schwab. And you get the bonus of dumping a bank that supports <a href="http://cheapions.blogspot.com/2010/11/hand-in-hand-in-hand-in-doom.html" rel="nofollow">predatory lending/Mexican drug war money laundering</a>!<br /><br />Then again, ATM fees disproportionally affect people who can't afford internet access, so...6.54https://www.blogger.com/profile/16142293932150029874noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1541468051247516447.post-26572922639524490322010-11-14T19:08:24.785-05:002010-11-14T19:08:24.785-05:00What's unfortunate is that in our neighborhood...What's unfortunate is that in our neighborhood, you can't extra cash back on your purchases. Not anywhere. Not at the Duane Reade. Not at the supermarkets. Nowhere. This is usually how I do cash withdrawals. It's far cheaper too since there's no fee from the merchant and (usually) no fee from banks. The closest place I know that does cash back is the Super Stop and Stop and that's not very close.<br /><br />What's really weird is that merchants generally LOVE to give cash back. It keeps their nighttime cash deposits very low.Sethnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1541468051247516447.post-59361580020008446042010-11-14T11:03:14.168-05:002010-11-14T11:03:14.168-05:00These ATMs are actually cheaper than bank ATMs - t...These ATMs are actually cheaper than bank ATMs - they charge $1 - $1.75, vs. up to $3 at bank ATMs (if your bank doesn't happen to be Chase or BofA, which seem to be 99% of the ATMs in this city). And bank ATMs usually don't have any withdrawal options lower than $40 because they don't have $10 bills (although the handicapped-accessible one at the Citibank on 7th Ave. on Park Slope does have $10 bills, so you can get $30 - why the other machines in there do not I have no idea).babshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08365488181982105888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1541468051247516447.post-6506501709130593322010-11-13T23:10:23.158-05:002010-11-13T23:10:23.158-05:00I was curious about this phenomenon, so I did a li...I was curious about this phenomenon, so I did a little research. It seems that the point of advertising $10 bills is not necessarily to prey on people who only want to take out $10 at a time, but to be a source of smaller bills to businesses/entrepreneurs who need more tens and can't get them easily. My guess is that in a largely informal economy that has few actual banks within walking distance (the nearest are a ten-minute walk down to Church Ave.), ATMs play a large role in the local money supply. If people only have $20s, small bills will vanish fast. This creates a demand for smaller denominations, and while an ATM filled with $5 or $1 bills would be impracticable (i.e. it would run out in a hurry), an ATM filled with $10s would actually be a convenience to people (including, but not exclusively, people selling dime bags.)<br /><br />That's just my amateur-microeconomics two cents.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com