The Future of Money: Are We Going Cashless?

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Most people have a love-hate relationship with the bills and coins in their wallets. On the one hand, paying with cash — once ubiquitous — can be cumbersome in today’s fast-paced environment. No wonder that it’s becoming less and less commonly used as plastic in the form of credit and debit cards takes its place. On the other, many still consider paying with cash the safest way to guard against sneaky bank fees and interest charges.
So how did plastic get around to winning over cash? According to the Federal Reserve, it all began in the 1990′s. Between 1995 and 2006, the number of non-cash transactions per person grew from 250 a year to over 300. Examining note destruction data in more detail, economists at Cleveland’s Federal Reserve Bank claim that cash usage peaked in the mid-1990′s (which is roughly the same time paper checks peaked.)
While it is difficult to track the exact number of cash transactions in a given timeframe, cash has clearly taken a backseat to other payment tools.
The Rise of Debit Cards
It’s no coincidence that cash usage peaked and began declining in the mid 1990′s. The culprit? Debit cards. As senior research analyst Red Gillen told the New York Times, “when debit cards were introduced in the early ’90s, that was the beginning of the slow and gradual decline of paper checks and cash.” The trend away from cash was further cemented in the early 2000′s. According to the Cleveland Fed, the following non-cash transactions grew between 2000-2003, with percentage growth shown in brackets:
* Credit card transactions (6.7%)
* Automated Clearing House transactions (13.4%)
* Electronic benefit transfers (15.4%)
* Debit card transactions (20%)
During the same period, the number of paper check transactions declined by 4.3%.
The debit card hasn’t lost an ounce of popularity during the late 2000′s. Just the opposite: in May 2010, ABC News reported that MasterCard debit customers spent as much on debit ($118 billion) during the first quarter of 2010 as they did on credit cards – the first time that this has ever occurred. Visa’s debit-card volume first exceeded its credit card volume for the first time even earlier, in December 2008.
The Fall of Cash

It was largely the increased convenience and safety of debit that inspired people to gradually use less cash in their day-to-day spending. Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey spoke for many consumers when he told the New York Times that “the problem with cash is that it is tangible, it’s inconvenient, you have to carry around a bunch of bills and you have to continually go to the A.T.M.”
U.S. coins (namely the penny and nickel) now cost more to produce than they are actually worth. And the United States is not the only country to be witnessing a decline in cash-based transactions. The UK’s Telegraph, citing a Payments Council report, predicted that cash will be used in fewer than half of all UK transactions by 2015. The trend is already underway: just 59% of 2009′s 37 billion transactions were cash-based, down from 73% only ten years ago.
Japan, meanwhile, has reportedly discussed a total abolishment of cash in order to fight deflation in that country. London’s Times Online found that while the idea might appear to have come from “the realms of economic science fiction,” the recommendation to do away with cash completely has been seriously discussed among Japan’s financial authorities since June 2009. In all, the Times Online reports that currency in circulation is about 16% of GDP in Japan (compared with 2%-3% in most other developed countries.)
A Cashless World

The realistic prospect of an entire country abandoning cash illustrates the direction in which world commerce is headed. A whole host of forces (from government policy to consumer trends) is conspiring to make cash less and less relevant to daily economic life.
In fact, new transaction methods are popping up every day. Cell phone-based payments, for instance, have become widespread overseas in recent years and are now a standard means of paying for just about anything in Japan. The Times Online notes that of Japan’s six competing cashless payment systems, “many” are built into wireless phones. In total, Japanese consumers are estimated to carry some 120 million cashless payment chips.
In the United States, companies like PayPal are making it easy to make purchases and swap money using only a mobile phone. Rather than trying to replace credit and debit cards, American companies like Square and GoPayment are equipping phones to work with them. As the New York Times explains, the credit and debit card issuers “stay in the middle, extracting a fee with each swipe or bump” of the mobile phone. It may take a while for consumers to abandon cash completely, but in many ways, even here in the U.S., we already are a cashless society.
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15 Comments so far
leave a commentGreat Read!!
I personally hate carrying around cash. I would like to go to a cashless world.
Cash is king and always will be. Although debit and credit card transactions are more convenient if you are not a merchant you don’t understand the toll the interchange fees can take from your profit. I often use my debit and credit cards but for things under $5 I always try to use cash. I also don’t want a paper trail of everything I buy. A cashless society is the stuff big brother dreams about.
Yep this is great, like this they only have to push a button and watch you starve to death. Great, more control for the powerfull less control foor the poor and you’ll see what they do with power…..
This is really frightening. I hate the idea of a cashless world and do everything I can to prevent it from happening. I love carrying cash around. It makes money management far easier, and you never get stuck with an overdraft. When you’re out of money, you just can’t spend it!
This is why I always hate when people advocate dollar coins in the US – if bills are inconvenient, coins are so much heavier and harder to deal with!
Cashless is definitely the future. In fact, I believe we are on a steady march to a single, unified “world” currency that will be entirely electronic. The whole mess that started in 2008/2009 (subprime mortgages / CDOs / lehman bros) set the stage for what is to come. I think that whole fiasco was purposely engineered for the sole purpose of moving all of us closer to a unified world economic system on a scale beyond anything we’ve seen at this point.
Mark my words – we will move to a cashless global economy with a unified electronic system for buying and selling. Once the money is controlled in this way, we are only one step away from a single world governing body and a loss of sovereignty for all nations. All of this was prophesied in the Bible nearly 2,000 years ago. We are watching it happen now.
I went cashless for three major reasons: Not having to roll change and going to the bank to deposit it (waste of my time), when your money is in your pocket it doesn’t make interest (it’s dead/depreciating), and with my Amazon.com Chase Visa I reap steady rewards of $50/month because I am rewarded for every dollar I spend! If you ask me using cash or even debit makes you an idiot. Unless you don’t know how to do math, or don’t use mint daily
money management is just as easy except better because you also have a time window (btw your money is also making interest during these days) where you have a cushion before your bill is due. If you made a bad financial decision purchase on the 10th and know you are going to have a hard time paying your statement balance (NOT THE MINIMUM balance) on the 30th you have 20 days to borrow from somewhere cheaper than the credit card’s rate or work extra to make up the deficit cash. Those who are worried about the paper trail. Why? Street drugs are paid for in cash, illegal guns are paid for in cash. Making those transactions more difficult could actually decrease the crime rate. Yes it would be hard for a Grandpa to give his Grandson $10 for cutting the grass for him in a cashless world, but he could just instead by the toy the Grandson wants to spend the $10 on right? The only other downside I see is not being able to play quarters. I’m excited for the day I walk into a store and my RFID bracelet communicates with the doorway and every item I take out of the store is automatically totaled and billed to my credit card without swiping or signing anything. That is if I didn’t already order the item online from my couch based on a finger print scan on my iTable.
I still believe cash is king, I use it more and more, contrary to your great article. Don’t get me wrong, I think banks have a use, mostly investment but not for financing, at least for me and not big banks. I don’t use credit cards anymore because of an issue with AMEX, they called and sort of were ordering me to USE my credit card, it was weird, really, they said I didn’t use it enough, I felt bullied and canceled ALL of my credit cards ( 3 ) and have not had the need for them still. I know there are still locked services with credit card use but I try to avoid those.
As for the cashless world, phone, card or wand system, I can only say I really don’t trust them, not yet anyway, things in my country are progressing towards criminalizing cash possession in any amount and that irks me to the biggest extent, I can’t really imagine, why we would need to get rid of cash, it has no data attached to it, it’s anonymous and free to circulate; as for the electronic economy, it’s locked, managed, tracked, and ultimately enslaved.
It’s something to think about really.
I don’t think we could ever go completely cashless. There are so many small businesses that can’t afford to process a million credit cards. Most of the places I go to for a quick bite or a great cup of coffee are cash only. I can’t imagine losing these places because they can’t keep up with technology.
I am glad to see that at least people are spending as much on debit cards as credit cards. An improvement, in my book! I hardly ever carry cash, but there is just something so au natural about carrying it. I feel better using cash… like I am in control.
Smells like a conspiracy to me…next we’ll have chips in our fingers. Seek the truth people.
With technological advances affecting every facet of our daily lives, it is no surprise that our on-demand society is progressing towards only using plastic. Whether cash, credit or debit, the real issue is where you put your money for safe-keeping. For future generations, they’ll no doubt be looking for innovative banking options since the last generation of banks has let us down so badly.
it is taking a really long time to develop even though paper money has been much more expensive for banks to handle.
The best use of credit cards, hands down, is building yourself a credit history so you can get a mortgage and loans you might need. A very large perk of debit cards is not losing your money in the cracks of your sofa, and being able to trace your money if it’s stolen (to some extent). At the end of the day though, you always keep cash on you. Small enough amount that you’re not a target, but you never know when you’ll need it.
What happens to homeless people and street performers when we abolish cash?