A 'giro', also called a 'direct deposit', is a banking term for a method of
payment. It is almost the opposite of a
cheque. A cheque is given to the payee who deposits it in his or her
bank, whereas a giro is given by the payer to his or her bank, which transfers funds into the payee's bank, directly into his or her account. Giro is often used by
post offices as well.
The difference is one of 'push' versus 'pull'. That is, a cheque is a 'pull'-initiated transaction: the presentation of the cheque by the payee causes the payee's bank to seek the funds from the payer's bank, which then takes the funds from the payer's account if the funds exist. If they do not exist, then the cheque "bounces" (is returned to the payee with a message of insufficient funds). By contrast, a giro is a 'push'-initiated transaction: the payer directs his or her bank to take existing funds from his or her account and transfer them to the payee's bank, where the payee can then draw the funds out. As a result, a giro cannot "bounce", because the bank will only process the order if the payer has sufficient funds to cover the payment. However, this also means that the payer receives no benefit of "
float".
History and concept
Giro systems date back at least to
Ptolemaic Egypt in the
4th century BC. State granary deposits functioned as an early banking system, in which giro payments were accepted, with a central bank in Alexandria.
[1] Giro was a common method of
money transfer in
early banking.
Postal Giro or Postgiro systems have a long and honourable history in European financial services. The basic concept is that of a banking system not based on cheques, but rather by direct transfer between accounts. If the accounting office is
centralised, then transfers between accounts can happen simultaneously. Money could be paid in or withdrawn from the system at any post office, and later connections to the commercial banking systems were established, often by the convenience of the local bank opening its own account at the Postgiro.
By the middle of the
20th century, most countries in continental Europe had a postal giro service. The first postgiro system was established in
Austria on the early
19th Century. By the time the British Postgiro was conceived, the
Dutch Postgiro was very well established with virtually every adult having a postgiro account with very large and well used postgiro operations in most other countries in Europe and
Scandinavia.
The term "
bank" was not used initially to describe the service. The banks' main payment instrument was based on the cheque which has a totally different remittance model from the "Giro".
In the '''banking model''', 'cheques' are written by the remitter and then handed or posted to the payee, who must then visit a bank or post the cheque to his bank. The cheque must then be
cleared, a complex process by which cheques are sorted once, posted to a central clearing location, sorted again, and then posted back to the paying branch where the cheque is finally checked and then paid.
In the '''Postal Giro model''' 'Giro Transfers' are sent through the post by the remitter to the Giro Centre. On receipt, the transfer is checked and the account transfer takes place. If the transfer is successful, the transfer document is sent to the recipient, together with an updated statement of account being credited. The remitter is also sent an updated statement. In the case of large
utilities receiving thousands of transactions per day, statements would be sent electronically and incorporate a reference number uniquely identifying the remittance for
reconciliation purposes.
The rise of
electronic cheque clearing (and
debit cards as preferred instruments of payment) has made this difference less important than it once was. For example in some stores in the
United States checks are scanned at the cash register and handed back to the customer while the funds are removed from the customer's account.
Electronic bill payment
Modern
electronic bill payment is similar to the use of giro.
Advantages include:
★ Instant access to the funds via an
ATM or
cheque card.
★ There is no paper cheque that can be lost, stolen, or forgotten.
★ Payments made electronically can be less expensive to the payer; typically electronic payments may cost around 25¢ (US) vs. up to $2 to generate, print and mail a paper cheque.
In the
United States, the
Automated Clearing House (ACH), regulated by
NACHA-The Electronic Payments Association and the
Federal Reserve Bank, handles all interbank transfers, including direct deposit and 'direct withdrawal'.
References
1. A Comparative Chronology of Money, Roy Davies & Glyn Davies, 1996 & 1999.
See also
★
Paycheck
★
Pay stub
★
Girobank
★
Money order