In the interests of considering the other side of the coin, I do understand that a bank needs you to pay things on time and stick within limits agreed and there is a case for those who fail to do that being charged for this. But why can't it just be a little fairer rather than greedy? How about this:
* Charges capped at £10 per incident, to a maximum of £50 in any one month.
* Interest cannot be added to charges.
* A single occurance can only trigger a single charge, no more 'stacked' charges (things like a charge for returning an item causing you to go overlimit triggering a charge for that too)
* Overlimits of less than £10 cannot be charged for
* Any overlimit which is corrected within 2 working days or less cannot be charged for
* Late payments of 2 working days or less cannot be charged for.
* The charging system being subject to external scrutiny and a clear appeals process implemented with the appeal being considered impartially by an external body.
* Charges are not actually applied until 28 days after notification of them being placed to allow time for any appeal to be made, and when an appeal is in progress cannot be applied unless and until the appeal is overuled.
That way the banks would still retain the ability to charge people, without turning people who make minor mistakes into cash cows - and they'd still make a mint from it, even a £10 charge would not reflect any actual cost to the bank.
Which begs the question - is this *really* the most sensible option, bearing in mind how many millions of pounds this would cost the banks? I suppose in one sense, it would be great for the economy if thousands, if not millions of people got a sudden unexpected couple of hundred or thousand quid. But is this likely to happen, or is this just opportunistic rhetoric in the run up to an imminent election?
Well if the charges are ruled illegal, then the millions of pounds the banks will lose is millions of pounds they should never have had - they should have thought about that before making the charges.
Some banks are IMO making a rod for their own backs at present. I have two main bank accounts, one at HSBC and one at Natwest. Both are currently polar opposites when it comes to current charging policy. HSBC have completely eased up on their charges, granting considerable grace periods for you to correct any faux pas made, and small misdemeanours no longer even triggering charges at all - presumably they are looking at a kind of damage limitation by not applying charges when it's on the card that they might have to pay them back, and by making sure that only serious breaches trigger a charge, reducing the chance that charges made in the past will be remembered and claimed back.
Natwest on the other hand seem to have adopted an utterly ruthless policy - they will no longer waive any charges as goodwill gestures (apparently because of the court case) and ANY and ALL breaches, regardless of how much they are for or how long they last are now met with a £28 charge for each occurance. Presumably their view is to take as much money as they can whilst they can in case the plug is pulled on them doing this - perhaps forgetting that this means those unfotunate enough to live in their overdraft with a natwest account are going to be beating a path to their door to get all this money back if it's seen to be illegal.