This is a rich person’s row. But as a debt adviser, I’ve seen clients’ lives upended when they are denied access to basic accounts

Despite all the recent front-page attention given to Nigel Farage and today’s development – the resignation of NatWest chief executive Alison Rose – there is something else you should know: banks have been quietly closing accounts without giving their customers any reasonable explanation for decades. Setting aside Farage’s politics and personality, and Coutts’s fragile disposition when it comes to people rich enough but arguably not wholesome enough to utilise their elite banking facilities, it should concern us when banks close our accounts with little or no warning. Ordinary people don’t get the prime minister hollering for justice, and we certainly don’t get apologies from CEOs.

My own experience from some 15 years ago began with the receipt of a polite letter from Royal Bank of Scotland informing me that it no longer wished to offer me banking facilities, and giving me 30 days to take my business elsewhere.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Refund students hit by English university strikes, says watchdog

Three-day walkout begins at 58 institutions over pensions, pay and working conditions…

NHS feels strain as tens of thousands of staff suffer long Covid

ONS says at least 122,000 health service workers have condition, threatening patient…

Covid cases down but too soon to tell if UK has passed peak, say experts

ONS data shows slight falls in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, with…

Once-in-a-generation lunar event to shed light on Stonehenge’s links to the moon

Archaeologists and astrologers to study Wiltshire site’s lesser understood connection to the…