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How a pensioner made Spanish banks rethink counter servicesOlder people are ‘absolutely not against digitalisation...That’s here to stay’, all they want is ‘a more humane transition’ into the futureANOVER DE TORMES • It was his bank’s limited counter service and indifference to his struggles with ATMs and apps that forced a Spanish pensioner to act, highlighting the panic the digital revolution is causing many older people.For Dr Carlos San Juan, from the eastern port city of Valencia, the tipping point was an incident with an ATM in which the bank staff “flatly refused to come out and help” and would not let him in because he did not have an appointment.A retired urologist from Valencia, he went home and wrote a manifesto called “I’m elderly, not an idiot”, which was initially signed in December by around 100 friends and acquaintances.It struck a chord, quickly finding its way onto the Change.org online platform, where it picked up nearly 650,000 signatures of support and was put before the authorities.Such was the pressure that Spain’s three main banking associations last week signed a protocol in the presence of economy Minister Nadia Calvino pledging to improve customer service for older people.Bank branches “will expand their counter service opening hours”, “older people will be prioritised” and “ATMs, banking apps and webpages will be adapted with a simplified interface and language”, said the Spanish Banking Association (AEB), one of the signatories.A man withdraws money at a cashpoint set up in a library bus in Anover de TormesAFPDr San Juan hopes the measure will end the plight of those who still have banking books, and that of older people with mobility issues having to queue in wheelchairs, with walkers or sticks, who have to “keep coming back” to see a bank employee face-to-face.“I have Parkinson’s disease,” said this friendly, eloquent 78-year-old who normally goes to the bank when there are fewer people because he needs more time.People of his age need to be shown patience, he said. “We might learn something today and then forget it two days later.”Older people are “absolutely not against digitalisation...That’s here to stay”, all they want is “a more humane transition” into the future. AEB president Jose María Roldan agrees.“Dr San Juan has made us all realise we need to look after those who can’t go as fast and those who will always need help because of their personal circumstances,” he said during the signing ceremony.Since the financial crisis of 2008, the Spanish banking sector has halved its number of branches to around 20,000, shedding nearly 40% of its employees — who today number 172,000, European Central Bank figures show.That is an average of eight employees per branch, compared to an average of 12.5 in neighbouring France, which has 402,000 employees and 32,000 branches.Some are already trying imaginative solutions to address the problems. In Anover de Tormes, a tiny village of around 100 residents some 30km from the north-western town of Salamanca, a library bus pulls out of the mist and parks up.In November, the “Bibliobus” was fitted with an ATM which David Mingo, head of culture for Salamanca Province, described as “an important first step towards resolving a big problem”.After serving six people, the bus moves on to Santiz, which has 300 residents, three bars and a school.In front of the “Bibliobus”, Agustina Juan, 79, admitted with frustration that she did not know how to withdraw money with a card. In fact, in the three villages visited by AFP, only one person used the ATM to withdraw money.“I have no idea how to use it. You know why I have it? So, I can pay by card when I go to the supermarket,” she shrugged.At her side, 76-year-old Raquel Vicente said the elderly had lost track of their finances.“The only thing you can do in your old age is count your money, but with the system like this, you just can’t see it, so you live in this constant state of distrust,” she sighed. — AFP
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