I've noticed some similar in America recently.
I've got friends who move 5-6 figure sums for various personal businesses, and their banks have been extra critical of their transactions.
One bank got so annoying, that my friend tried to close the account, and couldn't!<p>Lately hearing more and more stories about people getting de-banked, as been making me feel a little nervous.<p>In the cases of the banks and my business friends, I'm more worried the banks are extremely over leveraged and don't want to part with any cash (like 2008 on steroids).
brazil, india, angola, china... they are all pushing a central bank owned database for even informal transactions... all the way down to buying candy at a red ligth.<p>no fees and instant payments are the carot (and then they add daily limits when criminals start to kidnap people to transfer money). But the end game is a stasis wetdream of state control over citzen relations.
As I’ve commented elsewhere similarly…this is a silly law by a government that wants more control over citizens but won’t fix basic things like electricity, road, and healthcare.<p>I wouldn’t mind this in a developed country with reliable digital banking, but it’s the opposite here. It’s not uncommon to have bank networks go down for hours or at random intervals…not having cash on you over here is the surest way to get stranded, yet they cap withdrawals and reduce the denomination of currency available for ATMs.<p>Our current administration (mind you, led by a President who’s a former coup de’tat military dictator) has been a farce since they got into power eight years ago…we’ve backslid on every ranking including economy, democracy, reputation, and social standing due to nothing but sheer incompetence…but sure, their minions will still vote for them next year because of religion and tribalism.