Digital payment administrator says consumers need a disincentive to use cash, which they call a costlier payment type than digital alternatives Salt, gold and silver were all once used as payments for goods and services before the advent of metal...
Salt, gold and silver were all once used as payments for goods and services before the advent of metal alloy coins and paper notes allowed for cheaper and more efficient ways of trading wealth.
But now coins and paper too might bite the dust if a proposal to incur a charge on cash transactions becomes a reality.
"Cash was smart when it replaced raw materials as form of payment,” Tina Füssel, the managing direct of digital payment administrator Nets, told Poltiken newspaper. “But now we are in a digital age and people should understand that we now mostly use electronic means to pay rather than paper and metal. In light of that, a charge for using cash would provide an incentive to swap over.”
A recent Nationalbanken report showed that the cost of using cash amounted to 5.8 billion kroner in 2009. This cost is higher than those incurred from all other forms of payment, including the Dankort debit card, credit cards, bank transfers and direct debits.
But while cash may be more expensive for businesses than all other payment types, consumers are still charged for using direct debits and credit cards. From October 1 shops have been able to charge consumers 0.75 percent of the value of their card purchases.
These charges, however, are misleading when compared with the real cost of processing payment types, the bank lobby organisation Finansrådet argues.
“The consequence of the new charges could be that people stop using credit cards and move move to cash. That means that you create the wrong incentive structure because it promotes the most expensive payment type,” deputy chief executive Klaus Jensen told Politiken.
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Insane: Charge for cash transactions proposed
Via Survival
Other arguments against cash are that money and coins are unsanitary,
After the "digital" payment comes the mark...
ReplyDeleteReally.
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure it IS "the mark" - as one won't be able to buy or sell without it.
ReplyDeleteAnd yeah - the whole idea is to make damn sure you can't run ANY transaction of ANY kind without "big brother" knowing about it.
Personally, I think the current "cold" will go pretty damn hot well before they try to eliminate cash...
I think the current "cold" will go pretty damn hot well before they try to eliminate cash...
ReplyDelete:)