The Vatican put a new coin on sale last week to
commemorate its historic papal transition.
Too bad overseas collectors
won't be able to buy it for months.
The Associated Press has
learned that the Vatican still hasn't fully resolved an embarrassing
shutdown in credit card services, despite announcing four months ago
that systems were back up.
The impact has been far worse than the
Vatican ever let on, costing the Holy See lost sales at a time when Pope
Benedict XVI's shock resignation and Pope Francis' surprise election
laid the groundwork for a bonanza in Vatican-minted papal memorabilia.
It's all emblematic of the continued troubles plaguing the Holy See's financial system, rocked by allegations of incompetence and
corruption.
But the new president of the Vatican bank, while
acknowledging the delays and losses stemming from the credit card
shutdown, is brushing off the fiasco. "So sales will be up in the second half of the year," Ernst von Freyberg told the AP in an interview, laughing.
The
truth is, however, that the credit card woes represent yet another
headache for the Vatican as it works to improve its reputation
internationally through a painful transition to financial transparency
in the fight against money laundering.
In an interview this
week, von Freyberg revealed that he was weighing whether to introduce
some sort of tax reporting obligations on the bank—known as the
Institute for Religious Works—to stem accusations that it's a tax haven.
"It
may well be that having done a thorough legal review," von Freyberg
said, "I come to the conclusion that we should pay more proactive
attention to it."
The credit card debacle began Jan. 1 when
Italy's central bank compelled Deutsche Bank Italia to stop providing
electronic payment services to the Holy See.
The Bank of Italy cited the
lack of an EU-required banking regulatory framework in Vatican City.
The shutdown meant visitors to the Vatican Museums had to use
cash to pay for tickets, audio guides and coffee table books on
Michelangelo.
It was a costly inconvenience given that museum revenues
are the top money-maker for the Vatican, bringing in euro 91.3 million
in 2011.
The Vatican's other money-making initiatives were similarly
affected: Its supermarket, pharmacy and duty-free department store were
cash-only. So was its Philatelic and Numismatic Office, which issues
commemorative and circulating stamps and coins for collectors and
tourists alike.
"A disaster. A disaster. A disaster!" lamented
Mauro Olivieri, the head of the coin and stamp office, which in 2012 was
the Vatican's third-place money-maker with some euro 20 million in
revenues.
"The year 2013 has been what I call the 'annus horribilis.'"
The
first half of 2013 should have been a windfall for Olivieri, given the
world's attention was fixed on the Vatican for a solid month, from
Benedict XVI's historic Feb. 11 announcement that he would retire at the
end of the month, to the March 13 election of the first Jesuit pope and
first pontiff from the Americas, Francis.
Such historic
occasions are sought-after by coin and stamp collectors, who lined up in
droves at temporary sales points in St. Peter's Square to buy the
commemorative "Sede Vacante" stamps that were issued as soon as Benedict
retired Feb. 28.
"Linn's Stamp News," the largest U.S.
weekly on stamp news and the market, featured the four-stamp "Sede
Vacante" collection on the front page of its March 18 editions.
But
anyone who placed an order through the Vatican to buy the stamps
electronically received word that credit card systems were down and
orders couldn't be processed, even though the Vatican had announced two
weeks earlier that the shutdown had been resolved.
So the order forms, thousands of them, piled up in boxes in Olivieri's offices.
Finally,
on May 27—five months after the shutdown—credit card sales resumed for
stamps and coins, but the damage was done.
The office is months behind
schedule, with a backlog dating to November.
Overseas
collectors who have long put up with the Vatican's antiquated way of
handling orders—through a time-consuming and labor-intensive
subscription and order process rather than simple e-commerce—said it was
almost the final straw.
"They don't seem to run it like a
business," said Henry Gitner, the main U.S. stamp dealer and retailer
who years ago stopped buying directly from the Vatican because of the
difficulties he encountered.
"The only way to get guaranteed delivery
... is to literally have someone there buy it and ship it, and then
you're paying a 10-15 percent commission."
In the U.S. alone,
stamp collecting is a $1 billion a year industry, according to Linn's.
Gitner estimated that a complete set of Vatican-issued stamps could run
to around $8,000.
Olivieri said he had no idea how much had
been lost, saying only that "undoubtedly" there were losses.
Asked if
the losses could reach millions, he said he couldn't say and that he had
simply informed his superiors that 40 percent to 50 percent of his
revenue comes from credit card sales.
"The Vatican had an
enormous problem because this happened to the entire Vatican, not just
to us: Think about the January sales at the duty-free store: a block on
credit cards during the January sales? People coming here during sales
with euro 600,000-700,000 in cash? Who comes with that? They come with
credit cards."
The Vatican had announced Feb. 12 that Swiss
firm Aduno Group had restarted credit card services in the Vatican.
But
only on-site "point of sales" terminals restarted then.
E-commerce was
something else entirely and it took until the end of May for the Vatican
to adjust its web interfaces with Aduno's virtual terminals, said Karin
Broder, an Aduno spokeswoman.
While visitors to the Vatican
Museums can now buy their tickets online to avoid the lengthy lines, the
e-commerce bookshop is still down, according to the museum website.
Customers are asked to email requests instead.
Requests for comment from the Vatican Museums were not answered.
When
asked why the Vatican didn't find a solution earlier, von Freyberg said
simply "I hope that the next time we will not be caught like this. If
you find yourself in such a situation, it certainly has a long story
before it."
Von Freyberg said the aim now is to mend
relations with the Bank of Italy and move forward on the Vatican's path
of transparency.
"I'm very confident that I'll get it done,"
he said in an interview in his large office inside the Vatican bank.
"And let's talk again ... and then either you have a human disaster
story or I can offer you a glass of spumante (sparkling wine)."
For
his part, Francis—who has made clear he wants a church "of the poor and
for the poor"—this week gave another clue to his thoughts on finance.
"St. Peter didn't have a bank account," he said in a homily.