Cashless society


A cashless society describes an economic state whereby financial transactions are not conducted with money in the form of physical banknotes or coins, but rather through the transfer of digital information between the transacting parties. Cashless societies have existed from the time when human society came into existence, based on barter and other methods of exchange, and cashless transactions have also become possible in modern times using digital currencies such as bitcoin. However this article discusses and focuses on the term "cashless society" in the sense of a move towards, and implications of, a society where cash is replaced by its digital equivalent—in other words, legal tender exists, is recorded, and is exchanged only in electronic digital form.
Such a concept has been discussed widely, particularly because the world is experiencing a rapid and increasing use of digital methods of recording, managing, and exchanging money in commerce, investment and daily life in many parts of the world, and transactions which would historically have been undertaken with cash are often now undertaken electronically. Some countries now set limits on transactions and transaction values for which non-electronic payment may be legally used.

History

The trend towards use of non-cash transactions and settlement in daily life began during the 1990s, when electronic banking became common. By the 2010s digital payment methods were widespread in many countries, with examples including intermediaries such as PayPal, digital wallet systems such as Apple Pay, contactless and NFC payments by electronic card or smartphone, and electronic bills and banking, all in widespread use. At this point cash had become actively disfavored in some kinds of transaction which would historically have been very ordinary to pay with physical tender, and larger cash amounts were in some situations treated with suspicion, due to its versatility and ease of use in money laundering and financing of terrorism. Additionally, payment with a large amount of cash has been actively prohibited by some suppliers and retailers, to the point of coining the expression of a "war on cash".
The 2016 United States User Consumer Survey Study claims that 75% of respondents preferred a credit or debit card as their payment method while only 11% of respondents preferred cash.
Since the founding of both companies in 2009, digital payments can now be made by methods such as Venmo and Square. Venmo allows individuals to make direct payments to other individuals without having cash accessible. Square is an innovation that allows primarily small businesses to receive payments from their clients.
By 2016, only about 2% of the value transacted in Sweden was by cash, and only about 20% of retail transactions were in cash. Fewer than half of bank branches in the country conducted cash transactions. The move away from cash is attributed to banks convincing employers to use direct deposit in the 1960s, banks charging for checks starting in the 1990s, banks launching the convenient Swish smartphone-to-phone payment system in 2012, and the launch of iZettle for small merchants to accept credit cards in 2011.

Research

Among the first sociological studies about cashless societies, see Aldo Haesler, Sociologie de l'argent et postmodernité, Geneva & Paris 1995.

Measurement

Share of payments


Country%
Singapore61
Netherlands60
France59
Sweden59
Canada57
Belgium56
United Kingdom52
United States45
Australia35
Germany33
South Korea29
Spain16
Brazil15
Japan14
China10
UAE8
Taiwan6
Italy6
South Africa6
Poland5
Russia4
Mexico4
Greece2
Colombia2
India2
Kenya2
Thailand2
Malaysia2
Saudi Arabia1
Peru1
Egypt1
Indonesia0
Nigeria0


A common measure of how close to a "cashless society" a country is becoming is some measure of the number of cashless payments or person to person transactions are done in that country. For instance the Nordic countries conduct more cashless transactions than most Europeans. Levels of cash in circulation can widely differ among two countries with similar measure of cashless transactions.

Amount of cash in circulation

Even though a cashless society is widely discussed, most countries are increasing their currency supply. Exceptions are South Africa whose supply of banknotes fluctuates wildly compared to most nations, and Sweden which has significantly reduced its currency supply since 2007. China's currency has decreased from 2017 to 2018
Value per
inhabitant
CodeExchange rate
EOY2018
Value per
inhabitant
Country or
region
$10,194 CH 0.9842 10,033 Switzerland
$8,471 HK 7.8319 66,346 Hong Kong SAR
$8,290 JP 109.9127 911,000 Japan
$6,378 SG 1.3617 8,684 Singapore
$5,238 US 1.0000 5,238 United States
$4,230 XM 0.8734 3,695 Euro area
$2,404 AU 1.4166 3,405 Australia
$2,003 KR 1,116.0961 2,236,000 Korea
$1,924 CA 1.3629 2,623 Canada
$1,683 SA 3.7500 6,311 Saudi Arabia
$1,417 GB 0.7813 1,107 United Kingdom
$1,009 RU 69.6203 70,234 Russia
$825 CN 6.8778 5,672 China
$682 SE 8.9562 6,111 Sweden
$680 MX 19.6438 13,365 Mexico
$513 AR 37.6680 19,318 Argentina
$327 BR 3.8812 1,271 Brazil
$311 TR 5.2915 1,646 Turkey
$230 IN 69.6330 16,042 India
$205 ZA 14.3750 2,945 South Africa
$196 ID 14,410.4803 2,827,000 Indonesia

Amount of cash in circulation (historical)

The amount of cash in circulation was much lower in past decades in all countries except Sweden. The oldest comparative figures at Bank for International Settlements were from 1978 and only including the USD and 10 other currencies.
Country201820081998198819782018/1978annual
Switzerland$10,194$6,371$3,065$2,688$2,0085.084.15%
Japan$8,290$7,436$3,728$2,275$72411.456.28%
United States$5,238$2,927$1,679$870$42812.246.46%
Germany$4,230$3,324$1,759$1,300$6806.224.68%
Belgium$4,230$3,324$1,244$1,127$1,2293.443.14%
France$4,230$3,324$804$700$6056.994.98%
Italy$4,230$3,324$1,205$747$39410.746.11%
Netherlands$4,230$3,324$1,272$1,189$6796.234.68%
Canada$1,924$1,444$685$554$3206.014.59%
United Kingdom$1,417$1,168$726$470$3264.353.74%
Sweden$682$1,553$1,082$1,063$7720.88-0.31%

Legal status

Under a Massachusetts law dating back to 1978, no retailer may "discriminate against a cash buyer by requiring the use of credit". It was the only U.S. state to have such a law until March 2019, when New Jersey passed similar legislation; car rentals, parking garages, and airport stores have carve-outs under the legislation. The bill came shortly after the city of Philadelphia passed a similar law. San Francisco has also banned cashless stores.

Advantages of a cashless society

Reduced business risks and costs

Cashless payments eliminate several risks, including counterfeit money, theft of cash by employees, and burglary or robbery of cash. The costs of physical security, physically processing cash are also reduced once a business goes completely cashless, as is the risk that the business will not have enough cash on hand to make change.

Reducing transmittal of disease via cash

Cash provides a good home for disease-causing organisms.

Transaction speed

Restaurant chain Sweetgreen found cashless locations could process transactions 15% faster.

Elimination of high-denomination notes for purposes of reducing criminal activity

One significant societal advantage cited by proponents is the difficulty of money laundering, tax evasion, performing illegal transactions, and funding illegal activity in a cashless society, Many countries have regulated, restricted, or banned private digital currencies such as bitcoin, partly to prevent illegal transactions. Large amounts of value can also be stored in real estate, antiques, or commodities like diamonds, gold, silver, and platinum.
Some have proposed a "reduced cash" system, where small bills and coins are available for anonymous, everyday transactions, but high-denomination notes are eliminated. This would make the amount of cash needed to move large amounts of value physically awkward and easier to detect. Large notes are also the most valuable to counterfeit. The United Kingdom declared only banknotes of 5 pounds or less were legal tender after World War II because of fear of Nazi counterfeiting, although a £5 note then had much more purchasing power than the current largest note of £50. In 1969, the federal government of the United States declared that banknotes of value over $100 would remain legal tender, but any notes in government hands would be destroyed and that no new notes of those denominations would be printed in the future. Such notes were last printed in the USA in 1945. Canada did the same thing with the CAD$1000 banknote in the year 2000. Sweden printed 10,000kr banknotes in 1939 and 1958, but declared them invalid after 31 December 1991. Singapore has recently announced that they would no longer produce the SGD$10,000 banknote. The European Central Bank has announced that the €500 denomination banknote would not be included in the next series of euro banknotes.

Better collection of economic data

Rather than conducting "costly and periodic" surveys and sampling of real-world transactions, "real data" collected on citizens' spending can assist in devising and implementing policies that are deduced from actual data. With recorded financial transactions, government can better track the movement of the money through financial records which enables them to track the black money and illegal transactions taking place in the country.

Easier consumer budgeting

As digital payments are made, transactions are kept in records. Cashless payments facilitate the tracking of spending expenditure and record the movement of money. Having recorded transactions, it can help citizens to refine their budget more efficiently.

Concerns

Lack of privacy

In a digitized economy, payment made will be traceable. With traceable transactions, institutions would have potential access to this information. With these digital traces left behind, digital transactions become vulnerable. Such transactions allow businesses a way to build a consumer's personal profiles based on their spending patterns. The issue of data mining also come into place as countries head towards a cashless society. Cashless transactions leave a record in the database of the company as one make payment, and this information becomes a way for prediction of future events. Through large number of records, data mining then allows the organization to compile a profile of an individual through its records in the database.
Going all-digital, these data retrieved from transactions lead to widespread surveillance where individuals can be tracked by both corporations and the government. These records might also be available to hackers and could be made public after a data breach.

Problems for the unbanked

Cashless systems can be problematic for people who currently rely on cash, who are concentrated in certain populations such as the poor, near poor, elderly, undocumented immigrants, and youth. Electronic transactions require a bank account and some familiarity with the payment system. Many people in impoverished areas are underbanked or unbanked. In the United States, almost one-third of the population lacked the full range of basic financial services. In 2011, an FDIC survey found that approximately one-quarter of households whose annual income was less than $15,000 had no bank account. Nationwide, 7.7% of people in United States do not have bank accounts, with levels over 20% in some cities and rural counties, and over 40% in some census tracts.
As part of its Smart Nation initiative, Singapore has been moving towards a cashless economy. 14.4% of the country's population is over 65 years old, and the majority of seniors still use cash as their only mode of payment. Not used to digitized payment methods, troubleshooting issues such as managing lost cards or passwords and managing their expenses can create potential trouble for anyone transitioning from cash.

Digital fraud

When payment transactions are stored in servers, it increases the risks of unauthorized breaches by hackers. Financial cyber attacks and digital crime also form a greater risks when going cashless. Many companies already suffer data breaches, including of payment systems. Electronic accounts are vulnerable to unauthorized access and transfer of funds to another account or unauthorized purchases.
Attacks on or accidental outages of telecommunication infrastructure also prevents electronic payments from working, unlike cash transactions which can continue with minimal infrastructure.

Centralized control

Opponents point out that an entirely cashless system, in addition to tracking all transactions, would enable a central government to:
Consumers are less aware about the amount of money they are spending day-to-day when swiping their card to complete a transaction than if they budgeted money into a wallet and paid in cash.

Criticism in Sweden

is one of the best examples of the results of efforts to create a cashless society. Sweden is exceptional in that the amount of cash in circulation has reduced substantially. Swedish society changed profoundly from 2000-2017 due to attempts to replace all cash with digital payment methods. The concept of cash-free bank branches began in Sweden between 2000 to 2005, with a cashless branch being a step toward an upcoming closure of that branch. From around 2008, the Swedish banks began giving special hardware to their customers which could be used to process financial transactions from home. People still had the choice to use cash, however, and those who so wished could still do business in cash at the bank offices that remained.
This trend began around 2008, and peaked in connection with the 2015 to 2017 exchange of all Swedish coins and banknotes. According to the banks' head offices, cash was no longer required as withdrawals and deposits were possible through machines. But for "safety regulations", the maximum amount a bank customer could withdraw was about 5,000 to 10,000 SEK per week, and similar "security rules" for deposits were established as well. Later, all the major regular banks with branches began an enforced process of either closing down branches or making them "cash free". Today very few cash handling bank branches still exist.
The limited availability of cash in Sweden has caused difficulties for smaller boutiques, shops, and convenience stores, which depend on cash, as they can no longer deposit their daily takings or obtain any change. Non-profit organizations, which are very common in Sweden, have also experienced an outsized impact. In response, Swedish banks have introduced a mobile telephone payment system known as Swish. But this system has suffered from many problems.
The banks have dismissed complaints about the change as "a problem for elderly people" only, essentially claiming that some were only struggling to learn a new technology, rather than being unhappy with a totally new transaction method. Opponents of the change, however, contend that the technological excitement has changed too much too fast, saying that many dangers lurk in the reeds. Concerns have been expressed about a rising number of fraudulent transactions, and the fast development of Quantum Computers contributes to fears of hacking within the system. The debate about a cashless Sweden became more complicated when the Swedish authority Myndigheten för Samhällsskydd och Beredskap—MSB or "the Authority for Community Protection and Preparedness" in their writing "Om Kriget eller Krisen kommer" contained a list of items to store permanently at home in order to be prepared, which includes "cash in small denominations". A wave of negative criticism followed in Sweden from experts outside the banking sphere expressing their concerns. The former head of police, Björn Eriksson, started a movement in the spring of 2016 known as Kontantupproret or "The Cash Petition". This movement has quickly grown to a considerable size, with many contributors describing troubles caused by the increasingly hostile attitude expressed by banks against cash. The range of complaints covers a wide variety of issues. For instance, the well-known TV3 figure Robert Aschberg got mad after having paid at a pharmacist's with the Swish system through his mobile telephone, because he almost immediately received an advertisement from the same pharmacy, raising privacy concerns. Svante Linusson, professor of mathematics, claims that "the liquidation of cash is slowly destroying our democracy". A billiard club in Malmö was almost forced to close after their bank of 20 years refused to acknowledge them as a customer after the billiard club refused any other payments but cash. The digital Swish system increases money laundering. A traditional summer market in northern Lycksele went into bankruptcy after a computer error. Because people had been required to pay with phones and cards, there was not enough money available for them to conduct business in their market.