Wachovia’s Haiti relief profiteering comes under fire

Even as they struggle with the far-reaching impact of the economic crisis, millions of working people around the world have made a personal sacrifice to support relief efforts in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake that struck Haiti on Jan. 12.

Wachovia bank
For Wachovia, Haiti’s earthquake tragedy means
good business.

The corporate managers at Wachovia Bank, for their part, haven’t been quite as moved.

The bank has become the target of irate customers who have launched a campaign against Wachovia’s profiteering off of donations to Haiti. Wachovia continues to charge a 3 percent fee on international transactions destined to the relief effort.

According to the Huffington Post, 21-year-old student Heather Lynn created a Facebook page denouncing Wachovia after the bank charged a transaction fee on her $10 donation. Her page attracted more than 200 followers in a matter of days.

“I just don’t understand how a bank can make a profit from a tragedy, let alone get away with it,” Lynn said. (Huffington Post, Jan. 29)

Responding to the firestorm of criticism, Michael Klosterman, a spokesperson for Wachovia’s parent company, Wells Fargo, said the bank’s $350,000 in donations and pledges to Haiti more than make up for the profits from transaction fees.

How generous! How kind!

Never mind that Wells Fargo received $25 billion from taxpayers as part of the federal bailout. Never mind that, following its acquisition of Wachovia, Wells Fargo posted a record $3.17 billion in profits for the second quarter of 2009. The banking giant—the fourth largest in the country—reaped $12.3 billion in profits for the year.

Wachovia’s practices may be repulsive, but are hardly surprising. For these corporate profiteers, nothing trumps their bottom line.

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