Figures.

Jan. 15th, 2007 12:44 pm
bjarvis: (Toronto city hall)
[personal profile] bjarvis
I keep a reserve of Canadian money, Toronto Transit tokens, a chequing account and a credit card from a Canadian bank for my infrequent trips home. My US credit cards now charge a 3% service fee for non-US dollar transactions and the rates by the money exchange houses at the airports and border crossing points are obscene so this is my favourite way of saving a few dollars.

Alas, the TTC is ditching their old transit tokens in favour of a more counterfeit-resistant version. I'm keeping two of the old standard tokens as memorabilia but that leaves me with 10 transit tokens which either need to be used by January 31 or exchanged in person before the end of the year.

I guess I have yet another business side trip to make when I return to Toronto in April.

Date: 2007-01-16 01:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bjarvis.livejournal.com
When I lived in Canada, I kept a US dollar chequing account as well as a CDN dollar chequing account at the same bank. It was a blessing being able to avoid currency conversions, esp. when the rates were flailing in the wind at that time.

Date: 2007-01-16 07:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] moofedct.livejournal.com
Damnit I want that dollar back to the mid pre-2003 mark of < $0.70! There's a Vancouver condo to pay for, ya know!

US$ accounts in Canajun banks

Date: 2007-01-17 12:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trawnapanda.livejournal.com
one of the lead items in this evening's CBC radio news was a gentleman in Montreal wanting to open a US$ account with the Royal Bank of Canada. They asked him various questions which I would not have thought appropriate to a bank, one of which was his citizenship. When he replied that he had dual citizenship in Iran / Canada, the account was refused.

RBC claims to be following US regulations by denying US$ accounts to dual citizens of Canada + any of Iran, Iraq, Cuba, Sudan, North Korea and Myanmar.

The CBC News story is here

I'm not sure that this is legitimately the business of the US government. US dollars are not the property of the US government, instead, they are fiscal obligations of that government. As long as the currency is neither forged nor stolen, it is not the business of the US government, I would have thought, if, for instance, (as was the case) I gave my nephew American cash to spend on a cruise this Christmas on a ship flying some flag of convenience (certainly not US, and not in US waters).

The putative bank account would have contained property of a Canadian citizen in Canada, in a bank that is a Canadian fiscal institiution.

A similar instance of extraterritoriality came up a few weeks ago -- a hotel in Norway or Sweden, owned by a US chain, is being taken before the local human rights commission for refusing Cuban guests.

good luck with YOUR bank accounts.

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