Fears of a Greek bank run
In the middle of the 2001 debt crisis, Argentines stormed their nation’s banks to get their money out. To stop the stampede, the government imposed controls that allowed them to take out only $250 at a time and limited withdrawals for overseas trips to $1,000.
Greece, in the middle of its own financial crisis, is teetering on the brink of a default. Many of its wealthier citizens are also uneasy about what lies ahead for their cash. According to estimates from private bankers in Greece and Cyprus, as much as 10 billion euros have left the country for Greek-owned bank subsidiaries in Switzerland and Cyprus in the last couple of months.
“Customers are coming…from Greece on a daily basis,” says one private banker who works for a Greek bank in Cyprus. “They fly here in the morning, bring us a check and fly back to Athens in the afternoon.”
One banker in Athens reports that many of his clients have sent funds out of the country in recent weeks, fearing that the government will take a bigger bite of their money. “They’re afraid they’ll have to pay tax on their cash,” he says.
Read More: – By Dody Tsiantar, contributor, CNN

