Michael -- again - it is a matter of personal preference.  Every instance you 
talk about is absolutely true for banking in the old days.  I, too, used to 
think that bank rec's were absolutely necessary -- in fact, as an auditor for 
30 years - I recommended them as a must have!

But, with easy, on-line, instant access to balances and statements, 
all-electronic payments (I maybe wrote 3 checks all of last year), and better 
and faster electronic payment systems, the need for monthly reconciliations has 
gone the way of the horse and buggy - for many people (not all - and certainly 
not for businesses who write hundreds of check).  It does get you where you 
absolutely need to go -- it just is an old and tired mode of transportation 
that have been surpassed by better and faster ways to get to the same place! 

Ken 

(PS -- my mother-in-law still uses bank by phone to call the bank for her 
balance instead of going online to see her balance.  She does not get paper 
statements because all banks charge for them now.  She still keeps a paper 
register as well.  She reconciles manually once a week. See the analogy?)

-----Original Message-----
From: gnucash-user <gnucash-user-bounces+pyz01=cox....@gnucash.org> On Behalf 
Of Michael Hendry
Sent: Friday, July 3, 2020 11:53 PM
To: Chris Good <goodchri...@gmail.com>; Gnucash <gnucash-user@gnucash.org>
Subject: [GNC] Keep the Reconciliation Feature (was Re: Gnucash 4.0 Paper Clip 
and Link glyphs for file/web transaction associations)

> On 4 Jul 2020, at 02:45, Chris Good <goodchri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Ken,
> 
> I'm afraid I'm in the group that finds reconciling very useful. I want 
> to know if anyone is charging me when they shouldn't be, without 
> having to check my phone all the time. Admittedly it happens so 
> infrequently I could probably do without it, but I sleep better with it.
> 
> I know a developer is considering restructuring the columns to make 
> better use of wider displays. Maybe that will help you in future. 
> Myself, I don't really want to use the whole screen, but who knows, I 
> often find I automatically dislike change but end up liking it.
> 
> Regards,
> Chris Good


I agree with Chris that reconciliation is very useful, and I’d go so far as to 
say essential.

Without it, my reaction to an incoming bank or credit card statement couldn’t 
be more precise than “that looks about right”, with a gradual slide away from 
synchronisation.

A few examples:

My pension is paid net of tax and I set up a Scheduled Transaction (Sx) at the 
start of the financial year. My tax code varies through the year, and the net 
payment is tweaked during the year to get the whole-year tax-take correct - 
reconciliation allows me to knock these small differences into line.

Similarly, my mobile phone bill includes most of what I need in a fixed monthly 
payment, recorded by Sx, but occasionally adjusted to deal with surcharges for 
out-of-contract services.

Apart from my personal accounts, I deal with the bookkeeping for two small 
charities, whose accounts have to be certified by a qualified accountant for 
submission to the Office of the Scottish Charity Register. “About right” is not 
sufficient for this purpose, and as our accountants charge nominal sums for the 
service it is a matter of common courtesy to minimise (if not abolish 
altogether) any queries. One particular example from last year was an 
unpresented cheque which had been sent to another charity for a joint project 
and recorded through our books some months before the end-of-year.

Regards,

Michael Hendry


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