支票是在信用卡誕生之前就存在的一種支付方式。大多數(shù)美國人收到水電費(fèi)賬單的時(shí)候,一般在信封里夾一張支票寄回給電力和自來水公司。在沒有信用卡、沒有網(wǎng)上付費(fèi)的時(shí)代,個(gè)人支票可以說是唯一方便的付款方式。然而個(gè)人支票在中國并不普及,那我們來看看在美國,個(gè)人支票在銀行卡、個(gè)人電子支付盛行時(shí)代的興衰存亡。
It may be strange to Chinese people, writing a check, because the habit of the personal check, which is a popular way of paying bills in western countries, is not widely practised in China. But if you open a bank account in the United States, you will be asked and even offered a free checkbook with your name and address on each check. You can pay bills with checks, by simply writing the payment amount on a check in both letters and numbers, the recipients name, and finally your signature and the date, and youre all set.
However, because of the popularity of e-commerce in America, consumers can make payments by credit cards or online. Today, Americans are writing fewer checks than ever. Perhaps the old-fashioned ones will still carry a checkbook around wherever they go. Young people definitely use more debit cards[借記卡] and credit cards than personal checks. But for payments to the government, its best to stick with tradition checks.
I remember a few years ago, when I applied for a drivers license at the Department of Motor Vehicle—a state government office to deal with all vehiclerelated issues in America, I needed to write a check to the agency for the application. No cash or credit cards were accepted. Since I had no experience in writing a check, I asked my American friends for help. They were as puzzled as I was, as they had not written a check for a while. So I Googled it like many American people do nowadays: resorting[求助] to Google to find a solution to their problems.
Here is a sidebar[工具條]. According to the U.S. Federal Reserve[美聯(lián)儲(chǔ)], the number of checks paid declined by more than 50 percent since 2000. And falling check use has been accompanied by a rise in Google searches for“how to write a check”. Today, those searches are nearly five times as prevalent[普遍的] as they were ten years ago.
So with the help of my search engine, I learned how to write my first check. In fact, a veteran[經(jīng)驗(yàn)豐富的] check user also wrote me a voided check[作廢支票] as an example. So in the future I can refer to this sample. Now you know, just like learning a language, use it or lose it. If one seldom writes a check, it is easy to forget how to do it. But thanks to my friends sample check, I am going to carry it around, in case I need one of my own.