| Are you serious? Why would _anyone_ design a system like this? In Australia, the equivalent is EFT (Electronic Funds Transfer). You can deposit money to anyone's account by telling the bank their BSB (Bank/State/Branch number) and their account number; however this is not sufficient information to withdraw money. To withdraw money:
1. at a physical bank branch:
a. you put your credit/debit card in a POS terminal and enter your pin/sign to authenticate.
b. provide yous credit/debit card and photo ID to the teller.
2. at an ATM:
credit/debit card + pin number.
3. online banking:
either the credit/debit card number and a password and often a pin as well, or a separate number and password. All of these use an independent authentication source to the bank account number. Also the delays quotes here are insane:
In Australia, there are essentially 2 ways to pay for something (excluding cash):
1. EFT (Electronic Funds Transfer)
2. Credit card (possibly using a debit card) transaction. On POS terminals, you can choose either; the differentiator being whether you want to use a savings account (EFT) which goes via your bank, or a credit (or savings account accessed via debit card) account, which goes via MasterCard/Visa. All forms of EFT take 1-2 business days between banks, pretty much all the time; and they're universally free for the payer. Credit/debit transactions seem to take 1 day universally. We have a fairly stagnant banking system, with 4 major banks having basically the entire consumer market (and the vast majority of the nonconsumer market as well). Why, in a small, stagnant market like ours, do we fare much better than the US system? [edit: I forgot to mention, checks are dead here, they're now almost only used for large transfers of money where:
1. you don't want to use EFT;
2. they're over the daily online maximum for EFT transfers, and you can't be bothered to go to a bank branch (although you can only get bank checks at a branch AFAIK);
3. You want an immediate guarantee that the ammount was paid and the date/time/payer/payee (as opposed to waiting 1 day for the payment to come through).] |
Because it's descended from writing simple letters of credit (and by this I literally mean a letter that says "Hey bank, pay John here $15 out of my account kthx"), and giant ancient heavily regulated institutions are terrified of change.
The system wasn't designed exactly, it just sort of evolved