Submitted by Terence Blackett
bankHow Unlawful Bank Charges, Variable & Adjustable Interest Rates and the Practices of Corporate Bigotry and Institutional Prejudices Affect Black Businesses and Individuals?

A banker is a fellow who lends you his umbrella when the sun is shining but wants it back the minute it rains – Mark Twain

Virtually all countries in the world operate on what is called the Private Debt Money System (PDMS) and what that basically means is that institutions like the (Bank of England & Federal Reserve) can just create money out of thin air. The money is then lent to commercial banks who in turn lend it to you and me at sometime extortionate rates of interest.

Sir Josiah Stamp (1920) then president and director of the Bank of England aptly said that: “The modern banking system manufactures money out of nothing. The process is perhaps the most astounding piece of sleight of hand that was ever invented. Banking was conceived in iniquity and born in sin. Bankers own the earth. Take it away from them, but leave them the power to create money and control credit, and with the flick of a pen, they will create enough money to buy it back again. Take this great power away from the bankers and all the great fortunes like mine will disappear, and they ought to disappear, for this would be a better and happier world to live in.  But if you want to continue to be the slaves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create money and to control credit.”

With [6] commercial banks in Barbados, [54] offshore banks and [14] licensed Trusts, Finance and Merchant banks – last year alone, commercial banks made over $50 million from consumers (which equates to $185.00 for every man, woman and child in Barbados) for everything from investment interest on deposits, bounced/returned cheques, exceeding overdraft limits and fees incurred, also insufficient funds / negative balance charges – all of these “red-ink” entries fuelling their number one source of income.

In 2007 while in Barbados, a business colleague who owns a major construction firm was having problems with his bank, First Caribbean, and asked me to write several letters on his behalf to those specific members of the institution with fiduciary responsibility for overseeing the legalities pertaining to corporate accounts.

After several hard-hitting pieces of correspondence, utilizing the penchant of the bank’s legal and contractual obligations to address my colleague’s concerns – we were granted an audience in their corporate offices in Rendezvous to discuss the matter. The bank finally conceded, settled and ameliorated to my colleague’s amazement.

Today banks in Barbados are still playing on people’s ignorance of the law and at the same time, a lack of transparency, non-disclosure and external accountability only adds to the perpetuation of the status quo.

A recent article in the Advocate Newspaper by Stephen Alleyne  only helps to highlight the quagmire that Black business people as well as individuals encounter as they seek redress to basic idiosyncratic problems created by banks who are frankly a law on to themselves. The bank’s procedural processes in regard to follow-up are truly pathetic. Business people and individuals suffer undue embarrassment, no explanations whatsoever for stupid cock-ups relating to unauthorized movement of monies from accounts and on the other hand, refusal to move monies from savings accounts to business accounts to offset payment of cheques to clients and suppliers which results in returned cheques (though authorized) incurring penalty charges to the individual or business.

It is not to say that monies are not available even when the bank has a signed letter authorizing transfer of funds when needed to supplement additional payments to existing business accounts (but certain White owned businesses receive preferential treatment in this regard). Regrettably, there is never any acknowledgment, apology or a remonstration from the bank in regards to its corporate inefficiencies, the lax way bank officers approach their jobs and its functions but more so the management’s lack lustre approach to genuine customer complaints and even an acceptable way of curtailing future episodes.

My Australian colleague, friend and “freedom fighter” Jim Wilson  drew my attention to the fact that banks who charge “variable interest rate loan contracts are invalid under Common Law”, which means in principle that for all those with adjustable rate mortgages, the bank can fluctuate your rate “willy-nilly” depending on how the wind is blowing in the marketplace and in the Common Law it is a violation based on “informed consent” rendering the contract fraudulent in Mr. Wilson’s words.

Another area of concern is the issue of unfair bank charges – these tariffs are in principle “Penalty Charges” which are irrecoverable at Common Law. The precedent for this was Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Company Ltd v New Garage and Motor Company Ltd.[1915] AC79, along with Murray v Leisure Play [2005] EWCA Civ 963. It was held that a contractual party can only recover damages for an actual loss or liquidated losses. It is clear that these charges do not reflect any actual and/or real loss.

In the UK, under the terms of the Administration of Justice Act 1970, when a debtor has reasonable grounds to put an account into dispute, a creditor has to freeze all action on the account until such time that the dispute is resolved.

The Office of Fair Trading in London has looked at the way banks in the UK charge customers for their current account pricing, alongside a formal investigation into the fairness of charges for unauthorised overdrafts and returned items. The study did help the OFT to consider the current levels and incidences of the charges in the broader context of efficiency, transparency, value and consumer choice within personal current accounts. This has been the most wide-ranging study into personal banking to date – something the government of Barbados need to SERIOUSLY* address.

The law is plain: any charges banks levy on their customers must be proportional to the actual costs they incur.  The simple question is – does it really cost £35 to send an automated letter when someone’s gone 1p over the limit or for a bounced cheque which actually cost ONLY £2 to service as in the case of Barbados the cost is $60 when the actually cost to service that cheque is mere $5.

Banks in Barbados have been getting away with bureaucratic highway robbery for years – exploiting Black folks through monetary mechanisms which in some quarters borders on fraud. The looming crisis on the horizon is when suddenly out of thin air, inflation results in skyrocketing interest rates which will take most people’s variable or adjustable mortgages from 8% (which is frankly too high giving international interest rates stand at 0.5%) to double-digits which will push most monthly loans repayments beyond the reach of families who are already struggling to keep up their payments.

It cannot be ignored that class and colour contradictions still exist within the sphere of the banking system today in Barbados. According to Franz Fanon, “You are rich because you are white; you are white because you are rich. [1966] “We must recognize that ever since emancipation ‘Blacks’ have occupied the lowest positions of any biological group in the societies of the British Caribbean; and although there is no clearly drawn race or caste line in these areas, prominence and prestige, wealth and power, have historically been distributed in terms of light pigmentation.” [Smith, 1960]

So C.O.W. Williams et al will be treated with much greater sobriety than the [90] odd percentage of the population who are stigmatized because of entrenched socialization and values etched on our psyches eons ago by the whip of the “massa”.

Making sense of the duelling paradigms of money and exploitation is still a public policy debate even in the 21st century but in the words of Albert Jay Nock, “there are two methods, or means and only two, whereby man’s needs and desires can be satisfied. One is the production and exchange of wealth; this is the economic means. The other is the uncompensated appropriation of wealth produced by others; this is the political means.”

91 responses to “Banks in Barbados”


  1. Well, Hopi is right.

    Consider this…would you rather sit back & have them shove crap down your throat, or would you rather fight back, as the Lord did? He was the one who flogged the merchants out of the synagogue.

    As the Lord said, “I bring not peace, but a sword for evil.” Cut them down, I say!


  2. Get a grip, Hopi, we are aII in the same boat.


  3. David

    We keep coming to the same point. If a blog is submitted which has points to be challenged then do so
    *************************************
    Granted, there may be many things wrong with Banks in Barbados and their relationship with their customers but to lay it all at the feet of race or class is simplistic. He didn’t present anything new or tell us anything that we didn’t know but cut and paste snippets that have no relevance to Barbados.

    TB; don’t presume to know my status or that of my family, as to what type of person I am, what does sitting in a corporate box tell you about me? If I toured the White House does that make me the President or Presidential? I am someone whose BS antenna is on high alert for articles like this one.

    Anymore books you would like to prevent us from reading?

  4. Eric Ramsbottom Avatar

    Instead of quarrelling about banks why dont you address the issues that can be fixed by Government.

    Firstly, by legislation, ensuring that no one, NO ONE, can be jailed for debt.

    This is a practice right out of the middle ages and no one should be treated like a criminal for owing money.

    What is needed is a Finance Tribunal that any cases of debt are referred to for conclusion.

    Such can be made up of three persons as follows:

    – one magistrate to ensure that the law is served
    – one independent finance professional
    – one JP, as a respected individual (or) a representative of the banking association

    Any debt owed to an institution should be assessed as whether fair and reasonable, with the power in the Tribunal to write off such portion of the debt as is unreasonable and such to be recorded as correction to the credit record of the individual.

    This will address cases where the institution gave excess credit, not aligned with the earning power of the individual.

    The balance of debt should be re-scheduled by the Tribunal, in accordance with ther earning power of the individual.

    Where a business is involved, re-arrangement of debt or sale of assets can also be assessed and amended.

    It must be said that the main point here is that the owing of debt is a civil matter, unlike fraud, which is a criminal matter.

    Civil matters should never result in incarceration of an individual.

    The next point refers to the requirement for legislation that deals with foreclosure of residential properties, which is critical in diffuclt times.

    The tribunal should also have the power to order re-scheduling of mortgage payments and debt, such that homeowners are protected from sudden loss of jobs etc, with families put out.

    The financial institutions will not suffer from this legisation and the power of the Tribunal, as debts will be re-scheduled, not written off except in cases where there was an obvious over extension of unreasonable credit.

    This area is something that is urgently needed and will do far more to secure the future of Barbadians, than the issue of bank charges.

    But, does the Government have the will and courage, to enact the required legislation???


  5. @ Terence, “What about the age-old travesty of “WAR” fuelled by banks playing both sides of the war efforts against one another while raking in the profits…”

    Absolutely, Rothschild made a fortune doing this; and others right up until today are still coveting the god of this evil world system, “MAMMON.”

    @Avatar Gurl, “As the Lord said, ‘I bring not peace, but a sword for evil.”

    Correction, Jesus did not say, “…but a sword for evil”

    Hear His Word in proper context.

    “Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, BUT A SWORD. Fot I am come to set a man at variance against his father; and the daughter against her mother, and daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law. And a man’s foes shall be they of his own household. He that loveth father or mother more than me, is NOT worthy of Me; and he that loveth son or daughter more than Me is not wothy of Me. And he that taketh not his cross, and followeth after Me, is not wothy of Me. He that findeth his life shall lose it: and he that loseth his life for My sake shall find it. He that receiveth you receiveth Me; and he that receiveth Me receiveth Him that sent Me.” Matt. 10: 34-40).

    Jesus’ mission involves tension, persecution, death. The Gospel divides families (Cf. Mic. 7:6). The world will only experience true peace when the King of Kings, and the Lord of Lords, Jesus Christ, returns again to rule in Righteousness. (Isa. 2:4).

    If BU, which I am so grateful for, is still permitted to operate in the not too distint future, many will return here, to remember what a GP and me have being trying to warn about, IS very much on our *DOORSTEPS*

    The time IS VERY SHORT!


  6. @Sargeant,

    Your BS antenna serves you well.


  7. @Sargeant

    BU is never worried about BS submissions, so far the BU family has shown an uncanny knack for sniffing them out 🙂


  8. @Victor…………..Speak for yourself! Don’t put me in your boat.


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  10. Early in this century a relative overseas sent me $100 by wire transfer. The bank in Barbados debited my account$25 for receiving the $100. Bear in mind that the bank overseas and the local bank are part of the same company.

    I objected and was told that it was a new fee and that I had to pay it.

    I called the Central Bank to complain. I was advised to put my complaint in writing which I did.

    The Central Bank told me that even though they do not set the fees that banks can charge that they do have moral suasion.

    The bank stopped charging the fee.

    We need to complain more. In writing.

    Simple signed written complaints are very very effective.

    Oh and by the way I had a credit card with that bank.

    I cancelled it.


  11. Banks are supposed to be service providers and people need to address the issues of what services they provide and wheher the fees for those are legal, reasonable, or otherwise. The service banks provide are many, not just taking deposits, or giving loans, or making financial transactions; they also provide custody services, financial advice, etc. Most banks provide what they believe customers want, but usually not at the time and places that customers need them most. If local banks are not performing, Bajan are stuck because capital controls do not allow the movement of funds to banks overseas to get better services. The central bank also needs to be viewed as a supporter of the financial system, not as a consumer advocate. That may sound harsh but it’s part of the mandate of central bank.

    The laws governing banking are loose but oversight is also lax. Both need to be exposed for what they are. Banks can be sued, and often are quite successfully. It is often a good wake up call for sleeping dogs.


  12. @Sargeant
    “He didn’t present anything new or tell us anything that we didn’t know but cut and paste snippets that have no relevance to Barbados… Anymore books you would like to prevent us from reading?”

    Let me answer your last question first –

    With all due respect, I have never implied or insinuated that there are books that I would not want anyone to NOT* read… You give me too much credit but thank you for condescending to men to lower estate (hope your BS antennae is up)… The bonfires of the vanities of the French Revolution and The Age of Reason went out 300 years ago – so have no FEAR…

    However, as a member of the ACLU, I was asked last week to take the below quiz regarding books that are earmarked to be banned – permit me to educate you of the following:

    Take the Quiz if you like!

    We’re in the midst of Banned Books Week, a national celebration of the right to read. Created in 1982, Banned Books Week aims to raise awareness about challenges to the inclusion of books in libraries, bookstores, and school curricula across the country.

    Can you guess which of the following books has been the target of ban attempts?

    *The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

    *The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger

    *The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck

    *To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

    *The Color Purple by Alice Walker

    *Ulysses by James Joyce

    *Beloved by Toni Morrison

    *The Lord of the Flies by William Golding

    *1984 by George Orwell

    *Lolita by Vladmir Nabokov

    *Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck

    *Catch-22 by Joseph Heller

    *Brave New World by Aldous Huxley

    *The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway

    *As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner

    *A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway

    *Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad

    *Their Eyes are Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

    *Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison

    *Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison

    *Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell

    *Native Son by Richard Wright

    *One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey

    *Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut

    *For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway

    *The Call of the Wild by Jack London

    *Go Tell it on the Mountain by James Baldwin

    *All the King’s Men by Robert Penn Warren

    *The Jungle by Upton Sinclair

    *Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D. H. Lawrence

    *A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess

    *In Cold Blood by Truman Capote

    *The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie

    *Sons and Lovers by D. H. Lawrence

    *Cat’s Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut

    *A Separate Peace by John Knowles

    *Naked Lunch by William S. Burroughs

    *Women in Love by D. H. Lawrence

    *The Naked and the Dead by Norman Mailer

    *Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller

    *An American Tragedy by Theodore Dreiser

    *Rabbit, Run by John Updike

    Here’s another heads up for all you academically minded:-

    15 scholars and public policy leaders served as judges in selecting the 10 MOST HARMFUL BOOKS OF THE 19th & 20th CENTURY*-

    http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=7591&keywords=10+most+dangerous+books

    In regards to the second part of your comment –

    My concern is when locals make statements about what is relevant to Barbados – are you aware that your country has been sold down the river (oh sorry, down the Caribbean Sea)…

    Have you not realised yet that your “masters” have not changed since the 1600’s???

    Had you ALL* listened to your “FIRST” Prime Minister – a noble character of immeasurable stature, maybe you would have been able to hold on to more than the clothes on your back!!!


  13. @BU FAMILY

    All those holding US dollar accounts or investments in US$ – NOW IS THE TIME TO CASH IN BEFORE THE DEVALUATION OF THE DOLLAR*….

    Time to buy EUROS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    On the back of the meeting today in Istanbul the IMF & WB have been adding their voices to the international chorus hymn calling for a new global reserve currency….

    Turkish Deputy PM Ali Babacan is saying that SDR’s based on currencies will be discussed as an alternative to the dollar…

    Global governments, central banks, multinational corporations and investors are slashing their dollar holdings.

    The IMF has reported that from April through June the US$ share of global currencies fell to its lowest level in 10 years while the EURO* rises to an all time high…

    What this will eventually mean for the Barbados dollars – well go figure!!!


  14. The Coup – Pimps (Freestylin’ at the
    fortune 500)

    Well anyway I said that’s no burglar that my butler hahaha
    Mr. Rockafella let me in on the gossip
    I heard you and Mr. Getty are getting into rap music or something
    Yes we have this thing we do with our voices
    We sing like authentic rappers
    Well then could you muster it for us
    (David you must do)
    Well if they could make this music more funky
    Let me see if i can get my voice like those rappers [clears throat]
    Here we go

    Well if you’re blind as Helen Keller
    You could see I’m David Rockafella
    So much cash up in my bathroom is a ready teller
    ..
    Mf’s like me got stocks bonds and securites
    No impurities, straight anglo saxon
    Make the army go to war for Exxon


  15. Airlines like British Airways…

    Print & TV Media Houses….

    Major corporations…..

    BANKS…..

    Before I forget (GOVERNMENTS)….

    ALL SWIMMING IN DEBT*…

    http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/uk/ba+will+slash+1700+cabin+crew+jobs/3374302


  16. TM Blackett

    With all due respect, I have never implied or insinuated that there are books that I would not want anyone to NOT* read
    ***********************************
    But this is what you wrote on Oct.1 under the heading UN Inquiry etc.

    “• Good thing none of these “bloody” books are stocked in Cave Shepherd or any of the bookshop in BIM*…
    If Bajan are going to read – let them concentrate on books which will enlighten and inspire…”
    ********************************
    Need I say more?


  17. @ Terrence Blackett

    I read the ten most harmful books and to my dismay, the Bible is not there. In my opinion, this one book has caused endless rapes, murders and suffering – the crusades, the Spanish inquisition, burning of wise women as witches, racism, infanticides, etc., etc.


  18. @Sargeant

    You are really giving me too much credit here…

    People will read whatever floats their boat – crap and all…

    Just in the same way others think certain books should be banned from Public Libraries…

    It’s my opinion and I stand by regardless of what anybody thinks!!!


  19. @PAT

    You blame the BIBLE, GOD and everything you deem necessary – that’s on you….

    Your blame-game changes not one iota!!!


  20. I wonder when people will stop coming in the paper and blatantly lying. In Canada and the USA, you do have to pay annual fees for credit cards, it is only with certain cards that you don’t have any fees, however you get a very high APR between 18 and 25%, and some other fine print that can come back to bite you. People need to check their facts before generalizing and talking. I am talking from experienced.


  21. Experience*


  22. http://cibc.ca/ca/visa/article-tools/credit-card-rates-n-fees.html

    Just to prove a point. From a Canadian source.


  23. @TMB

    While I agree with Hopi that you are coming across as very arrogantly, I must say that your posts are helpful in terms of the principles which are employed.

    Actually, in terms of imposed charges and penalties, I consider that the bank is guilty of the criminal act of breaking and entering when they remove money from people’s accounts without their knowledge. I argue here that if charges are incurred, the customer should be notified and given at least 30 days to settle the bill; like any other business where charges are incurred the business sends you a bill.

    What I want to point out though is that the central banks, the federal reserve, etc. in collusion with the banking system, are the biggest money launderers in the world. They like a spy with a gun; licensed to kill.


  24. @Pat
    “In my opinion, this one book has caused endless rapes, murders and suffering – the crusades, the Spanish inquisition, burning of wise women as witches, racism, infanticides, etc., etc.”

    How could you forget to mention the crusades here by the Christians let loose on the BU family with their words of terror and damnation?


  25. @ROK
    “While I agree with Hopi that you are coming across as very arrogantly…”

    It is hard trying to please all the people all the time – equally difficult in trying to please some of the folks some of the time…

    It’s LIFE* man!!!

    Anyway, blame it on the boogy!!!


  26. Western Business Commerce is always based on projections. So they are always spending more time counting what they should have, rather what they have in reality. This is where the conflict is taking place. They are working out and manipulating charges when calculating what projected sales markets and debts they can maximise. Instead of saying that they made 3 million, they are saying they lost 1.5 million and are going after the 2 million that they never had. It is this egotistical greed stand point of the world that has forced the downward spiral.


  27. @TMB

    You taking this thing subjectively and not objectively. You ever plot a chart with scattered values and still had to come up with a straight line that would satisfy all the values even though the line was not passing through all the values? Or maybe even none of the values?


  28. @ROK

    Regrettably, Maths was never my favorite subject….

    However, I understand a basic principle which says – the shortest distance between two points is a straight line…


  29. @TMB

    Ah boy! I forgive you. The shortest distance between two points can be a straight line. Just depends on the position and direction the line is going in. It can be between the two points but running perpendicular. LOL!


  30. @ROK

    You WIN BRUV***

    I can’t beat that!!!!

    ROFLMBO…


  31. sorry you are both wrong
    it is the path of least resistance
    or gods way
    for example you cannot swim
    against the tide you must go with
    the flow as it is easier than against it


  32. @kiki: “for example you cannot swim against the tide you must go with the flow as it is easier than against it

    With respect, you have stated a falsehood here kiki…

    @kiki: “as it is easier than against it

    Certainly…

    @kiki: “you cannot swim against the tide you must go with the flow

    False.

    Those who are strong *can* swim against the tide…

    Sadly, few do….


  33. HI CHRIS
    3 TOP TUNES WAITING FOR RELEASE
    PLEASE CHECK SPAM BU


  34. @kiki…

    Could you please not shout?

    I go out of my way to ask my questions, and to make my statements, in a calm and cool voice.

    I would appreciate it if you could do the same….


  35. Chris
    you are correct excuse my typo

    it should have read
    ” You can not turn the tide”

    Anyone knows that you can swim
    against the tide as a daily routine


  36. kiki, if it went to the spam bucket, maybe that’s where it belongs


  37. Interesting to listen to a recent interview by the Chairman of HSBC who happens to be a priest! He explained why his bank had moved key officers to Hong Kong, China and other non-traditional financial countries. In essence global finance is shifting from the traditional centres.

    How is Barbados repositioning to take advantage? Perhaps it explains a former Prime Minister as Ambassador to China!


  38. Young Bajan // October 7, 2009 at 8:11 AM

    *****************************

    Well Mr. Young Bajan, I am a Canadian and I have a MasterCard with 5.66% interest rate and no annual fee. My son also has one with 6.5% interest rate and no annual fee. He has another with 11% interest rate and no annual fee. I only have one credit card.

    But of course, we qualify for these as we are solid financially and pay off all balances at month end.

  39. Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados) Avatar
    Dennis Jones (aka Living in Barbados)

    @David, Hong Kong is a long standing (some say ‘mature’) financial centre; Shanghai, in keeping with the Republic of China’s move into world prominence, is fast becoming a major financial centre, especially for business in Asia and the Pacific region. See http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/bizchina/2009-04/13/content_7670280.htm.

    HSBC Group (taking its name from the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation) is part of one of the world’s oldest banks.

    Global finance is not shifting from ‘traditional’ centres. It moves as it has for centuries, to where major money flows exist, but with strong cores in London, Paris/Frankfurt/Zurich, New York.

    Countries like Barbados, which do not generate large flows but can facilitate them (under certain conditions) have not learned how to lead in finance, but follow. They followed with benign tax regimes and loose banking regulations, and now those flavours are out of favour.

    Efficiency, speed, and integrity, should be at the core of whatever financial services the region can provide, irrespective of the nature, for it to be sustainable. But, the temptations and gains that exist from making money from being loose and less than honest (eg with money laundering and ‘schemes’) are not trivial. Not all of the region’s politicians are agreed on which road best suits.


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