SHARE
COPY LINK

OPINION

OPINION: Three things Swedish banks could do to stop denying foreigners accounts

Swedish banks should find new ways of combatting money laundering to increase financial inclusion, argues Malin Alpen, executive director of payments at Sweden's Financial Supervisory Authority.

OPINION: Three things Swedish banks could do to stop denying foreigners accounts
Malin Alpen is director of payments at the Swedish financial supervisory authority FI. Photo: FI

Many people in Sweden are denied bank accounts or have their bank accounts closed. Often this is something that happens to people who lack the traditional Swedish ID documents, or people who come from countries outside the Europe and who are in Sweden to work or to study.

Not getting an account is a big problem for those who are affected. Without a bank account, a lot of things in everyday life cease to function.

A bank account is a prerequisite for receiving your salary and being able to pay your bills. Being denied access to an account or having it terminated brings big problems and can lead to financial exclusion for those affected. We also see that companies suffer major problems carrying out their businesses as a result of losing access to their accounts. 

At the same time, banks play a key role in preventing criminals exploiting the financial system for their benefit. That they take this responsibility is key to consumer protection and it is important that the public has a high trust in financial services.

But casually excluding certain customer groups from having a bank account is not the right way to do this. Indeed, doing so can even increase the risk of money laundering by forcing people to use other payment routes where the controls and risk awareness are worse.

Instead, banks should look carefully at whether there are other steps they could take. We would like to see banks try to find ways of combating money laundering and other criminal activity which do not involve excluding individuals from their bank accounts.

This should be considered every time a bank is refusing to open or considering closing an account. We believe several measures are necessary to prevent financial exclusion from further increasing.

We would like banks to always:

Assess each case individually 

There is a risk that banks make decisions about whole groups of people instead of making individual decisions about which payment services a particular individual can have and which are offered by the bank. This risks making it unnecessarily difficult or even impossible for some people to access a payment account.

Find other risk mitigation measures

Banks should always check whether there are alternatives to excluding a person from having an account. For example, banks could tighten the monitoring of the customer’s transactions to be able to stop suspicious activity and quickly detect irregularities.

Offer low-risk accounts instead 

In some cases, where banks have identifed a higher risk, people should be offered limited accounts. These could be accounts where, for example, the customer cannot carry out certain transactions that might involve a risk of money laundering, for example through limiting the maximum size of a transfer or putting restrictions on which services can be accessed.

COMPARE:

The Financial Supervisory Authority will continue working to promote financial inclusion and to protect every person in Sweden’s right to have a bank account. We will do this, for example, through the new requirement on banks to report statistics on account closures and refusals, which will come into effect next year.

These statistics will give us the opportunity to conduct more active supervision.

If we do not find that banks’ handling of these issues is changing for the better, we are prepared to take action. This could involve new guidance or pushing for an clearer regulatory framework. This could even involve making interventions if we deem this necessary.

Without a payment account, it is difficult to make everyday life hang together. Banks have a great responsibility not to make this more difficult than necessary.

This article is a translation of an opinion piece published in the Svenska Dagbladet newspaper on Monday. 

Member comments

  1. I came from South Africa to join my family in Sweden October 2020. I am a retired elderly person on a pension. I have a Swedish ID number and permanent residence. I opened a bank account for my pension and investment payments to be deposited. In November I was advised the bank will no longer accept payments from or to South Africa.. As you can imagine this is a huge inconvenience, especially at this time of year with so many holidays. I am hoping to be accepted by a different bank

  2. This is such a huge issue, banks are driving innovation and capital away from Sweden. I came across many innovative startups that have to find international banks or neo banking solutions.

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

ECONOMY

What Taylor Swift’s Stockholm gigs tell us about the Swedish economy

Taylor Swift's visit to Stockholm is expected to boost the capital's economy with international fans grabbing a 'bargain' thanks to the low Swedish krona, despite the fact that hotel rooms are almost 300 percent more expensive than normal.

What Taylor Swift's Stockholm gigs tell us about the Swedish economy

The weak Swedish currency, the krona, means tickets for Swift’s three Stockholm dates are more affordable than elsewhere for many foreigners.

Fans around the world seem to have heeded Swift’s lyric “Grab your passport and my hand”, with “Swifties” from 130 countries flocking to Stockholm. Many queued through the night outside the Stockholm arena before the US star’s first concert on Friday.

“In total we will see approximately 150,000 people attending the concerts in Stockholm. Of them, 120,000 will be traveling to Stockholm,” Stockholm Chamber of Commerce chief economist Carl Bergkvist told AFP.

“They will be spending approximately half a billion Swedish kronor ($46 million) during their stay here in Stockholm,” he said.

That is money dished out on hotels, meals, shopping and transport, among other things, but not concert tickets or flights, Bergkvist said.

After opening her European tour in Paris last weekend, Swift’s Stockholm shows are her only dates in the Nordic region.

The Visit Stockholm tourism agency was also in on the hype, with its webpage on Friday proudly declaring “Welcome to Swiftholm”.

But last-minute tourists will struggle to find a hotel room in the city.

“We have approximately 40,000 rooms in Stockholm – 80,000 beds – and 120,000 people coming here. So we will be out of hotel rooms and we see a price spike of approximately 295 percent,” Bergkvist said.

“As soon as these three concerts were announced, there was immediately a surge in demand,” Åsa Lilja, commercial director at hotel chain Ligula Hospitality Group, told AFP.

“This also led to a rise in prices,” she said.

Swift-flation?

Sweden has only recently managed to bring down recent years’ stubbornly high inflation.

Economists have expressed fears that the Swift craze could send Swedish consumer prices rising again, as they did when pop diva Beyoncé opened her European tour in Stockholm last May.

“There’s a risk that prices will rise for hotel and restaurant visits, the concert tickets and everything that goes along with” the show, Danske Bank economist Michael Grahn wrote in a note.

However, “the price pressure would have to be even stronger than (the Beyoncé effect in May) last year to be reflected in the inflation figures”.

Swedish central bank governor Erik Thedeen even took the influx of foreign Swifties as a sign that the Swedish “krona was fundamentally undervalued”.

“It’s clearly a bargain to come to Stockholm,” he said.

Meanwhile, fans seemed ready to spend whatever it takes to see Swift perform.

“I spent around 7,500 kronor ($697) in total for three tickets. I think it’s worth it,” said Filippa, a 21-year-old Swedish fan queuing up early Friday for the evening’s concert.

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by The Local Sweden (@thelocalsweden)

SHOW COMMENTS