Keeping your money in a bank that a government insures at least $250k USD is a nice perk offered by most Western countries (I think anyways). If you move your life savings into a bank in the Philippines you are taking a gamble. Long established companies can go t*ts up overnight here. I suppose if a person's life savings is less than 10k USD (what the PDIC insures) then they don't have to worry about that.
Best Posts in Thread: Banking
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The exchange rate PayPal offers is truly dreadful. I used it once for a foreign currency payment. Because it was a relatively small amount I didn't pay attention to the exchange rate they were offering. I noticed it later and it was shocking, like almost 10% worse than that I would have got with my bank. They must make a fortune from foreign exchange payments.
PayPal is a very useful tool for same currency payments, but I would only use them for foreign currency payments if I had no alternative.-
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Have to renew a debit card next year with same credit union that issued one of the credit cards and I anticipate no problems; my son just sends me the cards by DHL. If there were long term delays in getting new debit ATM cards, another option would to send myself cash to western union office Phils from my US checking account (or ang credit card but that is more expensive!) where my SSA and pensions are deposited every month from my checking account (temporary process until card arrives) for a $5.00 transaction fee...Western union is great that way. I tried a trial run for that; they give you a MTCN and it works fine.
PayPal is also excellent and you can link it to home country credit and debit cards, savings and checking accounts. I recently used that to pay a Manila company for an item; the guy would not accept US credit cards but he did have a PayPal account. I could have used western union for that too I guess but either way the fee is about the same and much lower than the customary $50 bank transfer fee with big currency exchange loss when they convert dollars to pesos from the US. I used PayPal in that case because of the buyers protection plan it has against scams and defective merchandise (something they don’t have here).
In the rare case that you receive a personal check in the USA, such as a check for earnest money on a house you are selling there, I had my son take a picture of the check and he emailed the jpeg image to me. I printed it out here in the Phils and made an online check deposit (where you take a picture of that picture) to my US credit union. It worked fine.
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