1. Individuals who receive remittances from foreign companies must open a current deposit account in a bank, which can be a passbook or a bank card. According to the regulations of various banks, investors should open accounts in bank branches at or above the county level and receive remittances from foreign exchange companies, because branches below the county level do not directly receive foreign remittances and must transit through higher-level banks.
2. Pay attention to the specific English address information of the bank where the account bank receives foreign remittances, so as to fill in the form when the foreign exchange company withdraws money. Banks all over the country often accept remittances from foreign companies with different amounts of certificates for personal accounts, usually below $65,438+$0,000 each time, and in some cases below $2,000. If you withdraw a lot, you can remit it back in several times.
Characteristics of cross-border services:
1. The characteristic of cross-border delivery is that service providers and consumers are located in different countries, and in the process of providing services, the service content itself crosses national boundaries. There is no need for the flow of personnel, materials and funds, but through the networking of telecommunications and computers. For example, a consulting company in one country provides professional services such as law, management and information, as well as international financial services, international telecommunications services and audio-visual services to customers in another member's home country. There can also be the flow of people, materials or funds, such as leasing services provided by leasing companies in one country to users in another country, as well as financial and transportation services. This kind of service trade fully embodies the general characteristics of international trade and is the basic form of international service trade.
2. In terms of cost and expense, cross-border delivery is the most convenient and economical service delivery mode. On the one hand, consumers and service providers do not have to bear the expenses or costs caused by one or both parties having to provide or accept services under the other three service delivery modes. For example, in consumption abroad, consumers move to countries where service providers provide services, while in the mode of commercial existence, service providers move to host countries in the form of establishing new commercial entities, and in the mode of natural person flow, service providers move to host countries as natural persons to provide services. On the other hand, because providers and consumers don't have to move, cross-border provision actually saves consumers and providers a lot of time and resources, and the benefits are not necessarily inferior to other service delivery modes.