Australians are using less cash than ever. Weโve stopped taking money out of ATMs. Weโve stopped using it to buy coffee.
And while other societies stubbornly cling to old-fashioned payment methods, weโve taken up contactless tap-and-pay with great enthusiasm. And now, as COVID-19 has induced a fear of physical contact, thatโs set to accelerate.
A long decline
When did so many Australians fall out of love with cash? The most recentย surveyย of consumer payment behaviour from the Reserve Bank of Australia suggests itโs been a long time coming.
In 2007, cash accounted for 69% of transactions, cards 26%. The most recent survey, in 2019, found cash had fallen to 27% (down 10% from the 2016 survey), and cards were at 63%.
Despite the recent growth in things like Apple Pay, internet and phone banking account for just 3% of all payments.
Theย Commonwealth Bankย said Australia is the sixth least cash-dependent society in the world and could be cashless by 2026. Other more ambitious estimates suggest that could happen in justย two years.
Itโs a trendย across the Western world. Even in the United States, where things like tap-and-pay are a rarity compared with Australia, three in 10 adults donโt use cash each week.
The virus makes it worse
But these changes in spending patterns will probably be locked in even further by the pandemic, with more shops urging customers to use cards or contactless payments, says Swinburne University of Technology Professor Steve Worthington.ย
โI think people will get used to not using cash and after the pandemic those habits will roll on,โ he says.
โContactless, digital and other payments will increase.โ
In early March, the World Health Organisation was misreportedย as having recommended contactless payments over cash. It had, in fact, advised people to wash their hands after using banknotes.
Still, the decline of cash has been swift. Anecdotally, at least, many cafes and restaurants are accepting only cards. ATM withdrawals haveย declinedย by about a third since the start of the crisis and thereโs been a 60% drop in ATM withdrawals in the UK.
But there are other ways the pandemic might have rewired our spending habits. In the early days when we were panic-buying toilet paper and pasta, others were doing the same with cash.
โWhen the whole pandemic kicked in there were a lot of large transactions where people took a lot of money out of the bank at a time,โ Worthington says.
โDuring a crisis like this, people feel a bit insecure, so youโd rather have cash to hand.โ
The Reserve Bank said some people were withdrawing millions โ the kind of behaviour last seen during the height of the global financial crisis.
Less cash, but not quite cashless
Worthington isnโt convinced of a cash-free future.
โCash will continue to decline, but it wonโt be eradicated,โ he says.
โWe might be a less cash society, but we wonโt be a cashless society.โ
Thatโs because for many of societyโs most vulnerable people, a cash-free society can be incredibly exclusionary.
โPeople with disabilities, the elderly, people in rural communities with less access to technology, newly arrived migrants without a bank account, theyโre all excluded,โ Worthington says.
Sweden, the poster child for a cash-free world, is a case in point. There are fears it moved away from cash so fast that many who relied on it were left behind, and itโs now soย toughย to even find an ATM in Stockholm that the country recently passed aย lawย forcing banks to offer cash.
And in the US, thereโs a growing pushback against cashlessness at a local level: in January New York joined New Jersey, San Francisco and Philadelphia in passing aย lawย stopping businesses from refusing cash.
Worthington says once the pandemic is over, Australia should consider doing a similar thing. We still have our share of unbanked or underbanked people. And during a tough economic recovery itโs they who will suffer most without freedom to pay with cash.
This article is the first in a series on the future of money by SmartCompany, Crikey and The Mandarin.
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