Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

Doesn’t this only apply to individual transactions?

Only it’s very weird to just assume that this might apply to bank deposits…




>Only it’s very weird to just assume that this might apply to bank deposits…

Is it? I find it weird you think so. If you and I exchange > 3000 between us, nobody will ever know, so the law is pointless. The one place that this can be policed is at the bank level. You're assumption seems to be that if you gave me 3000, I'd just keep it in cash.

In the US, if you make a deposit > $10,000, the bank is regulated to report it. It doesn't matter why you are making that deposit, it gets reported. Applying the same thing to Euro markets only seems natural.

Edit: Actually, even car dealerships have to report someone showing up to buy a car with >$10,000 in cash as well.


> Is it? I find it weird you think so.

We might focus on the law itself and not some hypothetical situation.

> nobody will ever know, so the law is pointless.

You can’t sign a contract for anything worth more than €3000 if you want to pay in cash. If you want to declare your income, pay taxes, prove that you obtained the money legally when you later want to deposit it to an bank, during a tax audit etc. Of course it won’t affect transactions which are already done illegally so it depends on what do you mean by ‘pointless’.

The $10k limit is also a thing in Europe, the exact amount varies by state though (I think).




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: