--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> My best friend is pregnant (not with my baby), and thus
> has been looking to move into a new apartment here in
> Sitges. Because my work schedule has slowed down for a
> while, I've been helping her look. As a result, I've 
> had the opportunity to see 30-40 fairly upscale apart-
> ments in the Sitges area in the last few weeks.
> 
> And you know what every one of them had, and every single
> real estate agent pointed out as a "perk" for the apart-
> ment and thus an enticement to rent it?
> 
> A safe.
> 
> Some sort of wall safe or hidden-in-the-floorboards safe.
> And although the real estate agents always point out that
> the safe is "fireproof," as if the reason you'd want to
> keep valuables hidden away in it is in case of fire, as
> far as I can tell this is always said with a knowing
> "wink wink nudge nudge know-what-I-mean" inflection.
> 
> In Spain, after 40 years of Franco, the reason you would
> want a safe on your property is that you don't fully trust
> the banks. You want to keep a handy stash of cash and
> jewels and other valuables so that if the banks go bust
> or the world goes to hell in a handbasket, you don't.
> 
> And y'know...I find that a fairly healthy attitude. I've
> been watching the UK tourists in Sitges panicking lately
> and making desperate phone calls from cafes to move their
> money from British banks to Irish ones. The reason? As 
> far as I can tell from overhearing conversations, savings
> in British banks are not necessarily insured if the bank
> goes bust. These tourists are worried because all of their
> money is in a bank somewhere in Britain.
> 
> The Spanish, on the other hand, never put all of their
> money *anywhere*. Even the younger generations, who never
> knew Franco and the joys of living under a Fascist dic-
> tatorship, seem to have "inherited" this quality from their
> parents, who did. They keep a certain reserve in cash or
> other negotiables, too...just in case.
> 
> Spain is similarly skittish with regard to credit. When you
> open a bank account here, you don't get checks with that
> account. You can't. Almost all transactions here between
> individuals and the other companies or individuals with 
> whom they do business are handled electronically. The reason
> is that, under Franco, checks became viewed as worth less 
> than the paper they were printed on.
> 
> In the same vein, you rarely see credit cards, the way that
> they work in the US. Almost everyone uses debit cards, which
> means that -- other than a small 'overdraft' amount, limited
> to a few hundred Euros -- they have to have the money in the
> bank for anything they purchase on the card. 
> 
> There ARE exceptions, of course, and like most other EU nations
> some Spanish have been being lured into insupportable personal
> debt in recent years. But for the most part, theirs seems to
> be a largely cash economy. 
> 
> And again, I can't help but see this as a Good Thing. If the
> shit comes down over this recent financial meltdown, my Spanish
> neighbors (and me, because I've lived this way for decades now)
> will, I think, be in a somewhat better position than, say, the
> Irish, who are now officially the highest personal debtholders
> in the EU. (And the Brits want to move their money to *Irish*
> banks...go figure!)
> 
> I thought of this, and decided to share it with you no matter
> how inane it might be, because I just had to add some capital
> to my personal safe. It's not built into the wall; it's out in
> the garden, in a secure, locked-down spot known only to me, a 
> few trusted friends, and my attorney. And it may be illusion
> that makes me think that I'm somehow safer by keeping some of
> my assets there, but yes...I definitely do feel safer.


Safe manufacturers in the UK are one of the few businesses
enjoying growth at the moment. All the share sellers are buying
gold and keeping it at home apparently.

I decided I would quite like one myself this week. Kind of cool
to have a big old one with a dial. Not sure what I'd keep in it 
yet though. I suppose if nothing else I could guarantee no-one 
finishes the peanut butter without me knowing.


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