Do we still need cash? Humans have used all sorts of things as stores of
value — rare metals, strings of shells, even jugs of whiskey. Over time
the objects have become more ephemeral, from coins to paper to digital
forms. Economists see great payoffs in a cashless society: lower costs
for businesses and new tools to manage economies, stymie tax evasion and
fight money laundering. Critics see an erosion of privacy, frightening
new powers for governments and another sign of widening inequality.
Central bankers, meanwhile, worry about losing control of the supply of
money to digital networks like Facebook.
The Situation:
In the U.S., debit cards first beat out cash as the top way to pay in 2018, according to a Federal Reserve survey. As the coronavirus pandemic spread in early 2020, some merchants in Seattle and Sydney tried to stop accepting cash altogether, calling it unsanitary. (Some U.S. cities have made cashless stores illegal to prevent discrimination.) Still, fear of contagion could accelerate the general trend to more digital payments, according to the Bank of International Settlements.
More than 75% of adults in Kenya use the mobile-wallet service M-Pesa, for paying bills or getting paid themselves. China’s central bank is already rushing to mint its own digital currency for a country where even street-food sellers in small towns will prefer to scan a QR code on a mobile payment app such as WePa or AliPay than make actual change. A credit-card consortium is working to extend the system globally. In most developed countries, however, the value of cash in circulation has risen since the financial crisis of 2008-2009 along with the number of digital payments, suggesting cash (in large bills) is being increasingly used as a store of valuein uncertain times, especially with rock-bottom interest rates on savings accounts. -Full Report
The Situation:
In the U.S., debit cards first beat out cash as the top way to pay in 2018, according to a Federal Reserve survey. As the coronavirus pandemic spread in early 2020, some merchants in Seattle and Sydney tried to stop accepting cash altogether, calling it unsanitary. (Some U.S. cities have made cashless stores illegal to prevent discrimination.) Still, fear of contagion could accelerate the general trend to more digital payments, according to the Bank of International Settlements.
More than 75% of adults in Kenya use the mobile-wallet service M-Pesa, for paying bills or getting paid themselves. China’s central bank is already rushing to mint its own digital currency for a country where even street-food sellers in small towns will prefer to scan a QR code on a mobile payment app such as WePa or AliPay than make actual change. A credit-card consortium is working to extend the system globally. In most developed countries, however, the value of cash in circulation has risen since the financial crisis of 2008-2009 along with the number of digital payments, suggesting cash (in large bills) is being increasingly used as a store of valuein uncertain times, especially with rock-bottom interest rates on savings accounts. -Full Report