Originally posted by DimPrawn
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Reply to: And now they want to steal our cash...
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Previously on "And now they want to steal our cash..."
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
One of the reasons I try to pay by card these days. I touch very few £1 coins.
I don't understand why smaller retailers won't take card payments below a few pounds. Handling cash costs money. And then there is a chance you will get a few fakes.
Business banking tariffs in this country are odd.
It's still cheaper to walk to the sub-post office every day with the cash takings then to hire all the equipment and pay the charge per transaction on very small payments. (I've looked into this for other people.)
In countries that are cashless they don't have free consumer banking so the customer pays for using their card. Either each time, in a monthly account fee or above a certain number of monthly transactions.
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostSilly cos then they will just use smaller notes and coins.
Loads of one pound coins are fraudulent in the UK. Once I knew what to look for I off loaded all found, which as it's illegal I won't tell anyone else what to look for.
One of the reasons I try to pay by card these days. I touch very few £1 coins.
I don't understand why smaller retailers won't take card payments below a few pounds. Handling cash costs money. And then there is a chance you will get a few fakes.
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostScottish notes are legal currency, but aren't legal tender.
Legal tender simply means that if you pay your debt in legal tender, then you cannot be sued for non-payment. Since the bus driver refused entry, there was no debt, so even if it had been legal tender, he'd have been under no obligation to accept it.
Restaurants, garages and other places where you typically receive the service before paying are a different matter.
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Originally posted by Troll View PostThink it is the yanks that want to get rid of the 500 euro as it is the note of choice used in dodgy transactions
Loads of one pound coins are fraudulent in the UK. Once I knew what to look for I off loaded all found, which as it's illegal I won't tell anyone else what to look for.
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostI'm surprised the article didn't mention some European body wants to get rid of the largest denomination note in every currency so it's harder to launder money.
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Scottish notes are legal currency, but aren't legal tender.
Legal tender simply means that if you pay your debt in legal tender, then you cannot be sued for non-payment. Since the bus driver refused entry, there was no debt, so even if it had been legal tender, he'd have been under no obligation to accept it.
Restaurants, garages and other places where you typically receive the service before paying are a different matter.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostI was unpleasantly surprised to learn that it does not mean jack tulip in this country even though it's officially legal tender
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Originally posted by xoggoth View PostWent to Moscow a few decades ago and found when you spent notes at the airport they gave you sweets instead of change. Maybe abolish notes and trade in Fruit Pastilles or Maltesers instead.
Seriously this is a pain. Got £65k in a savings accounts and just been told the interest rate is going from 0.75% to 0.25%. Don't want to move it into some longer term account as looking to buy some land.
Or blood diamonds, blood diamonds are always good thanks to De Beers.
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Santander current account 3% up to 20K, just fund from another account
how is your land grabbing neighbor doing
Why not buy a house? Prices can only go up, up and away. Surely 65k will get you something decent in London
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Originally posted by meridian View PostGot caught out trying to get onto a bus with only a Scottish ten pound note. "what's that". "It's ten pounds". No it ain't, get off the bus"
"That's legal tender pal" is not said often enough.
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