Business Standard

Why cold, hard cash remains king

Love for paper money is simply stronger than the ease of credit cards and apps

- Leonid Bershidsky

We don’t have to like the way technology is changing the world. Given the technologi­cal disruption that’s happening everywhere, it’s reasonable to expect a little Luddite pushback. The growing share of cash in advanced economies might fall in that category.

Economists rarely admit they don’t understand something related to their area of expertise. But Daniel Gros, director of the Center for European Policy Studies, a Brussels think tank, did so in a fresh paper for the European Parliament. He called the increasing cash-to-economic output ratios a “mystery”. Isn’t cash supposed to be going obsolete with all the modern payment methods, from debit and credit cards to the latest fintech apps? Well, it’s not, except in Sweden and Denmark, where conscious efforts are being made to create cashless societies.

There are a couple potential explanatio­ns here. Since the use of cash in payments isn’t growing — cashless transactio­ns increased globally to $617 billion last year from $60 billion in 2010 — it might be logical to assume banknotes are used as a savings medium in the era of near-zero interest rates. But, according to Gros, no correlatio­n between rates and the cash-to-gross domestic product ratio has been found. Gros pointed out that in the euro area, ^500 bills make up a decreasing share of the cash in circulatio­n and the share of ^50 bills is rapidly increasing; that’s too small a denominati­on to keep large savings in. And in any case, keeping big amounts of money in cash is unsafe, inconvenie­nt and subject to crippling regulation when one wants to spend it, not to mention abrupt moves such as India's clumsy demonetisa­tion last year.

More cash could also be associated with a growing shadow economy. But the informal sector is shrinking everywhere, and the share of cash relative to GDP has increased the most in Japan, where the shadow economy is small, only about 10 percent of GDP.

One could also argue that a lot of dollars and euros are used outside their domestic circulatio­n areas. But that wouldn’t explain cash growth in Hungary or the Czech Republic — no one uses the forint or the koruna outside their home countries.

I have argued that if government­s want to eliminate cash — and, theoretica­lly, they’d all like to, if only to shrink the black market and complicate terrorist funding — they should also promote the spread of cryptocurr­encies such as Bitcoin. These are anonymous enough but still somewhat easier to trace than cash, striking a good balance between letting people trade privately, without supervisio­n, and making criminal activity riskier and more difficult.

I miss the more durable, heavier, lower-tech objects of 20 or 30 years ago. The best car I’ve ever owned was a Land Rover Defender, which had barely any electronic­s in it. Three years ago, my family gave away all the books that filled our apartment and switched to e-books — but now my younger daughter shows a clear preference for dead-tree books, and I find a guilty pleasure in handling them when I read to her. Clearly, Amazon is on to something with its expanding chain of brick-and-mortar bookstores. They are different from traditiona­l ones in that they stock and display books according to their performanc­e in the company’s online store, but Amazon appears to cherish the physical interactio­n with customers, who, in turn, miss the tactile aspect of realworld browsing.

It’s easier to use a service like Apple Pay or a plastic card than traditiona­l money. But there’s an old, pre-digital magic to cash. There’s something of a ritual to counting out bills or to folding them to put in a wallet. There’s also a physical reaction: A 2012 study found that people salivate at the sight of cash because we’re conditione­d to feel its attraction. Using cash also increases one’s emotional investment in a purchase. I remember hesitating in a Kathmandu shop that sold traditiona­l tangka paintings: The price seemed too high. So the seller urged me to pay with a credit card. “Easy money, plastic money,” he said. The tangka over my desk at home reminds me of the episode every time I look at it.

 ??  ?? People salivate at the sight of cash because we’re conditione­d to feel its attraction
People salivate at the sight of cash because we’re conditione­d to feel its attraction

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