Pages:
Author

Topic: Italy to ban cash transactions over €50 in 2013 (Read 2792 times)

full member
Activity: 197
Merit: 100
September 16, 2012, 12:26:02 PM
#25
AFAIK, the neighbouring country of Slovenia already has a ban on cash transactions over €50.
newbie
Activity: 38
Merit: 0
Looks like those crazy conspiracy theorists were right.
sr. member
Activity: 354
Merit: 250
so more and more people are going to be forced into using banks

good...good...
sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
Well, the actual text of the law is not yet decided in detail it seems. Would be so great if they were forced to take any kind of electronic payment -including Bitcoin  Roll Eyes
sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
Quote
http://www.silverdoctors.com/italy-to-ban-cash-transactions-over-e50-in-2013/

Courtesy Google Translate:

Rome – The technical Rome government wants to limit cash transactions in Italy.

From 2013, citizens may pay amounts in excess of 50 euros only by credit or debit card. That the Council of Ministers decided today.

The measure is intended to reflect the money laundering and black money payments to clamp down. Since July, the government has banned cash transactions over 1,000 euros.

i spent some of my honeymoon in rome... icecream there costs more than €50. can't see this law going down too well with tourists.

Hope that was a "as much ice cream as you can carry" offer  Cheesy
Of course inflating prices for tourists is national sport, but I never paid a single ice cream more that 3€.

As for the actual topic, I really cannot understand how they hope it could work. If you are a law-abiding citizen, you just have an expense added. If you are a criminal already ignoring tax laws (as many are), you will wholeheartedly laugh at just one more law to ignore. I am afraid I must agree with
The law is a bit messy to be onest: in fact the text say that a shop is forced to accept an electronic payment for every transaction over 50€ if the customer request so, not that is banned the cash transaction in se.
The big trouble is that POS in Italy will cost a lot of money to shop, specially for little ones (something in the 20-40€/month + a fee for every transaction from 2 to 4% for bancomat and up to 5-6% for credit cards,). A small shop will don't survive all that added costs (in some cases the fees will be higher than the earnings: on a phone card sold at 50€ there will be less than 0,5€ of margin but 1€ at least of fees, so for a PC sold at 500€  on wich there is a 60-70€ of earning but 10-20€ of fees).
Big shops and supermarket have a big discount on fees (usually the pay a fixed monthly fee so the higher is the volume of money cashed by POS the less it will cost for every € processed): is a kind of law written to help banks and big owners (the fact that our prime minister is a member of Bildberg Group and is a Goldman Sachs advisor and Moody's one it's just a coincidence )

...and to think the members of Parliament are arguing on ways to convince him to be president for another 5 years, in spite of the fact that he says he doesn't want to!
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
FIAT LIBERTAS RVAT CAELVM
Neither option is a good sign. A forced use of electronic purchases serves only to further subsidize the banks' income on the backs of the people..

Oh, I don't know about that...
It might just mean that more merchants will take bitcoin. After all, 50€ is only:
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 500
ercolinux is right

It's still unclear if it is "buyer are forced to use electronic money" or "seller must accept eletronic money" for transactions over 50€

and it's still unclear if this will pass at all or not.

Nither option is a good sign. A forced use of electronic purchases serves only to further subsidize the banks' income on the backs of the people..

Whether it passes or not now, they will find a way to move in this directon eventually. This gets it on the books for them, where it can appear to be something that there is a choice in now. Later they will mandate it behind closed doors.

I heard this news 2/3 times, and it seems that the seller must accept electronic money IF the buyer wants AND IF the transaction is over 50€
And you can bet through aggressive marketing at the consumer level the buyers will want this. They will be convinced it is better, safer, etc...
staff
Activity: 4256
Merit: 1208
I support freedom of choice
I heard this news 2/3 times, and it seems that the seller must accept electronic money IF the buyer wants AND IF the transaction is over 50€
Anyway as Gabi said it isn't already a law.
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008
If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat
ercolinux is right

It's still unclear if it is "buyer are forced to use electronic money" or "seller must accept eletronic money" for transactions over 50€

and it's still unclear if this will pass at all or not.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1001
The law dosent talk about the willing of the buyer, the buyer is forced to use electronic money.
They are simply lowering the limit, that should be 1000 as of now.
legendary
Activity: 1288
Merit: 1000
Enabling the maximal migration
The law is a bit messy to be onest: in fact the text say that a shop is forced to accept an electronic payment for every transaction over 50€ if the customer request so, not that is banned the cash transaction in se.
The big trouble is that POS in Italy will cost a lot of money to shop, specially for little ones (something in the 20-40€/month + a fee for every transaction from 2 to 4% for bancomat and up to 5-6% for credit cards,). A small shop will don't survive all that added costs (in some cases the fees will be higher than the earnings: on a phone card sold at 50€ there will be less than 0,5€ of margin but 1€ at least of fees, so for a PC sold at 500€  on wich there is a 60-70€ of earning but 10-20€ of fees).
Big shops and supermarket have a big discount on fees (usually the pay a fixed monthly fee so the higher is the volume of money cashed by POS the less it will cost for every € processed): is a kind of law written to help banks and big owners (the fact that our prime minister is a member of Bildberg Group and is a Goldman Sachs advisor and Moody's one it's just a coincidence )

I feel sorry for you.
legendary
Activity: 938
Merit: 1000
The law is a bit messy to be onest: in fact the text say that a shop is forced to accept an electronic payment for every transaction over 50€ if the customer request so, not that is banned the cash transaction in se.
The big trouble is that POS in Italy will cost a lot of money to shop, specially for little ones (something in the 20-40€/month + a fee for every transaction from 2 to 4% for bancomat and up to 5-6% for credit cards,). A small shop will don't survive all that added costs (in some cases the fees will be higher than the earnings: on a phone card sold at 50€ there will be less than 0,5€ of margin but 1€ at least of fees, so for a PC sold at 500€  on wich there is a 60-70€ of earning but 10-20€ of fees).
Big shops and supermarket have a big discount on fees (usually the pay a fixed monthly fee so the higher is the volume of money cashed by POS the less it will cost for every € processed): is a kind of law written to help banks and big owners (the fact that our prime minister is a member of Bildberg Group and is a Goldman Sachs advisor and Moody's one it's just a coincidence )
legendary
Activity: 1288
Merit: 1000
Enabling the maximal migration
No fucking way this passes.
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008
If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat
Quote
http://www.silverdoctors.com/italy-to-ban-cash-transactions-over-e50-in-2013/

50 euros

Since July, the government has banned cash transactions over 1,000 euros.

Typo? 500 euros?
It's not a typo, it's right, 50€

but i'm still unsure if that will pass. There are a lot of things that have been proposed and successfully happily refused. I strongly doubt that will pass.
hero member
Activity: 530
Merit: 500
so what will happen to all private holders of PM-s ?

how would they spend gold and buy a car ?
legendary
Activity: 2156
Merit: 1072
Crypto is the separation of Power and State.
Soo much for freedom *uch*  Roll Eyes

Freedom?  In Italy?   Roll Eyes

If enough Italians wanted to be free, they would have long ago hung from a tall tree the obscenely rich creepy old charlatan in the Vatican.

These are Romans after all; they voted fairly recently for actual capital F Fascism, 2000 years after trading their Republic for an Empire.
legendary
Activity: 3108
Merit: 1531
yes
Soo much for freedom *uch*  Roll Eyes
hero member
Activity: 588
Merit: 500
Typo? 500 euros?

I thought so too, but went to the source and confirmed 50 is correct. However, there seems to be some backpedaling taking place:

http://www.ilmessaggero.it/economia/bancomat_pagamenti_50_euro/notizie/217966.shtml

Either way...these kinds of restrictions are signs of fiscal desperation, and will drive people to learn and adopt Bitcoin at a faster rate to get around the stupid rules.
sr. member
Activity: 280
Merit: 250
Quote
http://www.silverdoctors.com/italy-to-ban-cash-transactions-over-e50-in-2013/

50 euros

Since July, the government has banned cash transactions over 1,000 euros.

Typo? 500 euros?
hero member
Activity: 667
Merit: 500
This is crazy talk... governments can say they are going to do whatever, but i have a hard time believing this actually flies, especially in Italy.  Shit I am from an Italian family, my Nonno is still kickin and gives me / my sister / cousins etc $100 every year for our birthdays.   This law would make that very act illegal..  Nonno ain't gonna start writing cheques or using paypal.

Pages:
Jump to: