anybody that want to vist the philippines and used your amercan debit,it can not be done,until you guys change this it going killl anybody coming,we allready have a guy in russion with out any money and he could not get to his money in the states,they think he was homeless until somebody talk to him,he back in the states now,you do not need to be in the philippines with a 1000 in your bank but can not get to it,and that can happen very easy,we get dollars not your persos,so the only safe way is buy your 2 way air fare and have ather 3000 dollars or above 6000 persos ,that if you stay in the philippines,you need a bank there where you can get to your money at any time
I am so frustrated with the credit card and debit card processors in the US that I've decided that I'll do as little business with them as possible. I have a US-based debit card that I can't use in the Philippines. Every time I try to use it to buy online, it gets rejected with some message about "fraud alert".
Why I use a Debit Card
One of the problems I have is with PayPal. Since I no longer have a US bank or credit card attached to my PayPal account, they won't let me do a direct payment with PayPal if the merchant sets up the product for an instant purchase. The interface won't let me get past the stage of linking a new credit card to the account. This is the only reason I've been using a PayPal debit card until recently. It's a MasterCard debit card issued by the JP Morgan Chase bank and seems to work fine if I use it via my olders son's computer (using a VNC login) in the US, but not so fine if I do it from here. Apparently, they're flagging anything from a Philippines IP address as possible fraud.
I won't be using it anymore. In fact, as soon as my US PayPal account is empty, I'll be closing it completely. I don't need it because I now use a Philippines-based PayPal account linked to my EON VISA Electron Card from UnionBank of the Philippines. I don't need to use the PayPal account as much as I used to because I can make purchases, pay for my web hosting on Media Temple's developer server and pay other fees which can use credit cards for payment with that debit card. I haven't switched it over yet, but I'm sure I can pay my monthly Skype bill with it as well.
Until I figured out how to get a VISA debit card in the Philippines, without the strange requirements that a credit card would entail, I was stuck with the US versions. Well, not anymore.
Overseas Locations and Tourism
Regardless of the reasons, fraud alerts and usage restrictions hinders tourism and traveling in overseas locations. I wouldn't want to have to call the bank every single time my debit or credit card is declined and it's not that easy to make an overseas phone call (not to mention the expense) in many places. What would a tourist do when their ATM withdrawals are declined like mine have been? I'm fortunate that I can use Skype to reach any phone number in the US, but a tourist may not know they can do that from a local Internet cafe.
What's really sad about all this is that the technology is available to clear the transactions without triggering a fraud alert. An example is that they could check my static IP address against my account, once the IP address was cleared manually the first time. They could also clear the transactions when I attempt a withdrawal from an ATM machine anywhere in Olongapo City after storing my city location and checking it against the account.
I feel for the traveler passing through who needs to get money from a US bank account. How many hurdles does a person need to jump over to get to their own money? Before I moved and decided to remain living in the Philippines, I didn't rely on getting money locally. I always carried more than enough cash with me. It was dangerous, I know, but it was the only way I could be sure to have enough cash to last for the entire trip. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone else. I tried using American Express travelers checks once and the hassle in converting them back to cash made the entire ordeal seem like a joke. It took me hours to convert those travelers checks at the American Express office at the Subic Bay Naval Station (in 1986) and it's the same freaking company!
Avoiding Frustration and Unnecessary Hurdles
In the more than four and a half years I've lived in the Philippines, things have improved in finance tremendously. Using local banking services is a whole lot easier than trying to get along with a country on the other side of the world.
My incoming Google payments go directly to my Philippine National Bank direct deposit account via a branch in New York City, as does my monthly pension. My other online incoming payments are going to my Philippines PayPal account. The only thing that requires my direct intervention is depositing Philippine pesos at UnionBank of the Philippines after I withdraw US dollars from the Philippine National Bank. Since I run all of my monthly errands at once, it isn't a big deal.
The only way for me to remove as much frustration as possible and reduce the hurdles to one is to stop doing business with US banks. Thankfully, that is now the case.