Big Aussie banks shut SA branches and ATMs
Australia’s big four banks have raked in billions of profit, but closed hundreds of branches and ATMs. See where you can’t get money anymore.
SA News
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More than 30 bank branches have been shut across South Australia in the last three years — including 10 in Adelaide city alone — while the number of automated teller machines has been decimated.
New figures reveal almost one in three ATMs has been removed from the state since 2019 — a total of 236 cash machines — at the same time the big banks closed their doors.
The move has left a record number of SA towns without a local bank or ATM, and has seen some of the state’s regions hit particularly hard by the cost-cutting wave.
The closures came despite rising, multibillion-dollar profits for Australia’s financial institutions, and the threat of a federal taskforce investigating regional banking services.
Figures obtained by News Corp showed the Commonwealth Bank, Westpac, ANZ and NAB closed 459 bank branches across Australia between 2019 and 2021, and shuttered 3,803 ATMs.
Adelaide’s western suburbs were hit hardest by the SA closures, losing almost one quarter all its branches with six closing down.
Another 10 bank branches closed their doors in Adelaide’s central and hills area, out of the state’s 32 closures, while two bank locations closed in the Barossa region.
The cost-cutting came despite rising profits for all four of Australia’s big banks, as the Commonwealth Bank reported a half-year cash net profit of $4.75 billion — up 23 per cent — and ANZ, Westpac and NAB recorded increased profits of $1.8 billion for the first quarter of the year.
Australian Banking Association chief executive Anna Bligh said the institutions were shutting branches and ATMs as part of a “massive transformation” in the way many Australians wanted to handle their finances and pay for goods.
She said banks had seen a 10 per cent decrease in consumers using cash, and Australians were using ATMs less as a result.
“We’ve got data that tells us 80 per cent of Australians prefer to do most of their bank services online or by the phone,” Ms Bligh said.
“But that still leaves a lot of people who are uncomfortable in those channels, and that’s why banks are still committed to keeping a branch network even though it may reduce in size.”
But Finance Sector Union national secretary Julia Angrisano said closing so many bank branches and ATMs was hurting communities, particularly in regional areas, as well as excluding bank customers who weren’t equipped to use online services.
“Closures have a devastating impact on local communities,” she said. “Jobs are lost, business is impacted and another local service disappears.
“Customers with disabilities, low levels of digital literacy and those with limited access to transport and of course older Australians (are affected).”
Ms Angrisano said new regulations should be introduced to ensure banking was recognised as an essential service.
“There should be minimum levels of service that are guaranteed,” she said.
“There needs to be a better assessment of community needs before a branch is closed. We would like to see community impact assessments become mandatory before a branch is shut.”
Swinburne University Adjunct Professor Steve Worthington warned banks were likely to keep closing branches and ATMs to maximise profits unless rules changed.
In a UK trial to address the same issue, he said banks were now being asked to prove customers would not be unfairly inconvenienced by the closure of a local branch before it could go ahead.
“If a bank intends to close a bank branch or take an ATM out of circulation, they have to prove that their customer base will not be disadvantaged,” he said.
“The expectation is that they’d have to put in alternative access arrangements, like mobile banking or cash deliveries.”
The Federal Government launched the Regional Banking Taskforce in late 2021 to address bank branch closures. It was due to report its findings in February but a Treasury spokesman said the report had yet to be finalised.