Jamaica Gleaner

The ATM is now 50 years old:

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AN AUTOMATED teller machine. The cash machine. In Britain, a cashpoint.

The ATM turns 50 years old this year. They machines are ubiquitous, and possibly still a necessity, despite the big changes in how people pay for things.

It was a radical move when Barclays installed cash machines in a London suburb in 1967. The utilitaria­n machine gave fixed amounts of money, using special vouchers – the magnetic-striped ATM card hadn’t been invented yet. There was no way for a customer to transfer money between accounts, and bank employees tabulated the transactio­ns manually at the end of each day.

As the ATMs became familiar, though, they changed not only the banking industry, but made people comfortabl­e interactin­g with kiosks in exchange for goods. Now that means getting movie tickets and boarding passes, self-checkout at grocery stores, and online shopping that brings products to your door with a few clicks. All are based on the idea that people can handle routine transactio­ns by themselves without a teller or cashier.

“The ATM tapped into that innate force in people that gives gratificat­ion for doing a task on their own and it grew from there,” said Charles Kane, a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management.

It was a radical concept at the time. The ATM wasn’t the first self-service device – vending machines and the automat had been popular before. But those dispensed items people could hold in their hand.

Bernardo Batiz-Lazo, a business professor and ATM historian (yes, they exist!) at Bangor University in Britain, said early users of automated tellers were often checking their balances twice: once to see how much was in their account, then again after withdrawin­g money to see if it registered.

“They were popular, but it took a long time to slowly convince customers to learn about ATMs and use them regularly,” BatizLazo said.

For the banking industry, ATMs meant banks could be in thousands of places at once, not just in branches, and earn billions of dollars in fees from noncustome­rs. Banks used to staff dozens of tellers at each branch to handle routine transactio­ns, now many staffers work on other tasks, like sales or account maintenanc­e.

Around the United States today are roughly three million cash machines, according to the ATM Industry Associatio­n. Most are actually not owned by banks, but by private companies that install them at convenienc­e stores, restaurant­s and bars in hopes of grabbing customers who don’t want to find a bank branch.

The wide acceptance of the ATMs changed the types of cash Americans typically carry in the pocketbook­s. Since ATMs became more widely available in the early 1980s, the twenty-dollar bill has regularly been the second-most printed banknote each year by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The first-place spot is held by the one-dollar bill.

Even as people use cash less, and credit cards or mobile payments more often, the ATM isn’t going anywhere for a while. At least, that’s what historians and – unsurprisi­ngly – the ATM industry says. Devon Watson, vice-president at Diebold Nixdorf, the world’s largest manufactur­er of ATMs, says 85 per cent of all transactio­ns worldwide are still in cash.

Newer ATMs have more functions than ever. They accept cheque deposits, can transfer money between accounts, show an account balance, pay a credit card or mortgage payment, or even sell you stamps. NCR, another major manufactur­er of ATMs, say the latest models are also designed to act more like smart devices. Kevin King of NCR says that includes “swipe, gesture, multi-touch”.

And future ATMs will likely start selling products as well. Have a chequing account? The ATM will ask you whether you want to open a brokerage account. Much like tellers did.

 ?? AP ?? In this Wednesday, August 30 photo, employees Stephen Cheek and Lashanda Mitchell test automated teller machines during the manufactur­ing process at Diebold Nixdorf in Greensboro, North Carolina. This year, 2017, marks the 50th anniversar­y of the ATM.
AP In this Wednesday, August 30 photo, employees Stephen Cheek and Lashanda Mitchell test automated teller machines during the manufactur­ing process at Diebold Nixdorf in Greensboro, North Carolina. This year, 2017, marks the 50th anniversar­y of the ATM.

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