Normally my blogposts are filled with
cutesy turns of phrase and jokes about how much I love Germany. This
blog post will be different, it will be like the drunken text you
send to your ex boyfriend: you regret it the next morning, but
it needed to be said at the time. Today's phrase means “on the
warpath,” and I am ready to burn some shit down. Scorched earth,
Sherman's March to the Sea, The Battle of Lakarian City-style
My problem is one, Sparkasse Financial Group. The last time I was in Germany I had Sparkasse as my bank and
it was awesome. There were branches everywhere and the tellers were
efficient and the fees were non-existent.
My current problem with German banking
starting back in Radolfzell. As part of the program, we all opened
bank accounts as a group so that GIZ knew our account numbers and was
able to deposit our stipends in a timely fashion. Originally we were
going to open our accounts with Postbank, which is somehow connected
to the German postal service. Convenient since every town has a post
office, and thus a branch of this bank. The language school took care
of all the details for us, which, at the time, I thought was really
nice. The Postbank fiasco went on for about a month, wherein our
forms were filled out wrong and had to be redone, our forms were sent
back on some other technicality, and eventually our forms were
completely lost by Postbank. At this point it was the language school
director's turn to be on the warpath. You don't know her, but Frau
Heintze can be very imposing when she wants to be.
Frau Heintze is...you have to meet her. Off-topic: The CDC was so much better because of her. |
It was then decided that we would all
open up accounts with the Sparkasse, the entire process from leaving
Postbank to getting my Sparkasse debit card took about a week. Damn
fast. I was pleased. We were informed that we had online banking, and
that all we had to do was tell them our new location when we moved
and everything would be fine. Wunderbar!
It was all a pack of lies!
I got to Neubrandenburg and wanted to
deposit some money in my shiny new Sparkasse account from my Bank of
America account. I walked into the local branch and was met with a
frowning cashier who informed me that depositing money into my own
account would cost 10€. I
asked why and was informed that I was a Sparkasse Singen-Radolfzell
customer and not a Sparkasse Demmin-Neubrandenburg
customer, which is the biggest load of bullshit I've heard since I
was talking to the crazy lady in the Rosslyn Metro Station.
I
tried to email my banker at the Sparkasse Singen-Radolfzell, but she
has yet to respond (it's been 5 months). I also tried to use my
online banking, but I need my banker's approval to log in the first
time, and she won't respond. I then went to an ATM to print a
statement, since I can't access it online and I can't use the teller
service, and was surprised (read: livid) to discover that I had been
wracked with fees for every time I'd used my card to do anything. I
would later discover that the Language School had set up
(accidentally, I assume) savings accounts for us, not checking
accounts. Fan-fucking-tastic.
At
about the same time, all of the other PPP'lers were making the same
shitty discoveries that I was, and a flurry of emails were sent to
our program about getting new bank accounts. They resoundingly denied
that option, for a reason that was never fully explained to me.
But
fine, it's shitty that I have a savings account, and that I can't
actually use the bank tellers, and that I don't get online banking,
and that I'm being charged fees constantly, but I still have access
to my money.
And
then...I needed to wire money (checks don't exist here) to my friend
who payed upfront for our rental car to Cologne, so I went to the
teller in the Sparkasse, and was informed that I had to use the wire
transfer machine...in
the lobby. I could have sworn I heard her say “back of the bus”
under her breath, but then again maybe not.
I go to the machine and
it won't let me wire the money. It gives no explanation. I walk back
in and ask the service desk what the problem is. Her response: “The
problem is, you're not a customer here, so I can't even look at your
account to see what the real problem is.”
I
almost punched her.
So
I guess my only solution is to withdraw the money in cash and strap
it to a carrier pigeon bound for Leipzig. I don't care if this
country is the financial powerhouse of Europe, their banking system
is a load of garbage.
If
you wake up tomorrow and there is a news report about a series of
arson attacks against German financial institutions, don't be
surprised. And also could you wire me bail money?
lol/god that SUCKS
ReplyDeleteumm...should I wire the bail money to Sparkasse or demmin or singen..or USBank, or CBYX, or just put "Germany" on the pigeon and hope for the best? Oh..and will that cost 10 Euros extra, or is it more since it is coming from the Damned Americans? Also, who decides the exchange rate for the current day..Germany...Greece...France? And just to aggravate them, I am going to use two esses for Sparkasse...SS parkasse :-) maybe I am the only one reading this who is old enough to get the "SS" joke
ReplyDeleteOh, God, I think I've found a new name for the SSparkasse! Thank you! And I would say that Greece "controls" the exchange rate in the same way a person jumping off a bridge "controls" their speed of falling.
ReplyDeleteThe problem is not only with the banking system, but with the whole bureaucracy system, I guess. I lived in Rostock two first months without any salary, at first because of our secretary negligence and then because of bank something. So I understand your rage, I think.
ReplyDeleteTwo months is rough without money. I think after two weeks I would have resorted to prostitution or selling my organs on the black market. I don't know how you held out so long.
ReplyDelete