The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Beginning of the end of the branch network banking we know

Taxpayers will feel rightfully aggrieved at latest slew of closures

-

There’s a ridiculous irony in a bank which is 71%-owned by the taxpayer closing branches to effectivel­y inconvenie­nce the people who largely own it. Some would call it cheek.

But that’s precisely what the Royal Bank of Scotland confirmed it would do on Friday as it decided to slash one in four of its outlets and axe 680 jobs in the process.

Sixty-two Royal Bank of Scotland and 197 NatWest branches will disappear, and hundreds of employees will be facing up to Christmas and New Year hunting for a new job.

RBS for their tuppence worth said the move was necessary because a growing number of customers are now using online banking rather than High Street branches.

Of course, they are right to an extent, as mobile transactio­ns and internet banking have their clear advantages.

However, no matter how much technology has moved on, there is no substitute for having a physical presence in town or city centres.

Someone asked me the other day if I was relieved that Fife banks were unaffected by RBS’ announceme­nt on Friday, but nothing could be further from the truth.

This is the beginning of the end of branch network banking as we know it – and Fife has certainly not escaped from this disappoint­ing knee-jerk trend towards closures this year.

Few will have forgotten RBS’ decision in March to shut six Fife branches in Anstruther, Cowdenbeat­h, Cupar, Dalgety Bay, Kirkcaldy High Street, Leven, and you can be sure that those closures have had a huge impact.

And when Friday’s news became apparent, one only needed to go back 24 hours or so to when the Bank of Scotland dropped the axe on its Lochgelly branch.

When the taxpayer effectivel­y bailed out RBS, there was a lot said about the importance of banks in the community and their wider social responsibi­lity.

However, these kind of decisions do nothing to help sustain local communitie­s and businesses and, perhaps even more importantl­y for the wider economy, encourage footfall to our ailing town centres.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Sixty-two RBS branches are to disappear.
Picture: PA. Sixty-two RBS branches are to disappear.
 ?? letters@thecourier.co.uk ?? For more on the closures, see page 13. Get in touch with your local office at Fife or send a letter to The Courier at
letters@thecourier.co.uk For more on the closures, see page 13. Get in touch with your local office at Fife or send a letter to The Courier at

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom