libertas
Member
- Messages
- 71
- Likes
- 8
As the Cypriot savers are discovering the hard way, they are the creditors of the banks which are failing. Unfortunately, few people who have their savings in the bank think of themselves as creditors of the bank, but that is exactly what they are.
I disagree. When making a loan the lender is usually the one who sets the conditions of the loan i.e. interest rate, time till repayment etc. When you place your money in a bank none of these negotiations take place, you take what you are given. You place your trust in the bank that when you come to withdraw your money it will be there. Government sponsored deposit insurance and the Central Bank as lender of last resort fortify this trust.
In my view depositing money in a bank is more a case of fiduciary. You expect the bank as a fiduciary to take care of your money. Whether they do or not is neither here nor there. Banks by conducting themselves in an overly risky manner are breaking that trust with their depositors. If it wasn't for deposit insurance, the central bank and government support there would be bank runs across the Western World tomorrow because it is obvious to anyone with eyes and ears that banks are no longer trustworthy.
To suddenly change the 'rules' in Cyprus is nothing other than theft and a massive breach of trust on the part of the banks, government and the ECB.