Otago Daily Times

Children and older people NZ’s biggest users of cash

- PATTRICK SMELLIE

AUCKLAND: As anyone who has bought a $2 picture from a streetside stall staffed by 7yearolds or watched an elderly person fumble with an ATM already knows, cash remains the preferred medium of the very young and older people.

Now, a Reserve Bank study into society’s use of the folding stuff has revealed this truth while discoverin­g not only that 85% of New Zealanders use electronic bank cards as their main payment method, but that nine out of 10 people ‘‘prefer not to use cash’’ and 60% are ‘‘indifferen­t’’ to the declining availabili­ty of real money.

One in four did not use cash at all in the previous seven days, according to the results of the Research New Zealand survey for the central bank, which is pondering the future for cash in a society where most monetary exchange occurs through credit and debit cards, and online.

However, ‘‘few people never use cash’’, threequart­ers of the population carries ‘‘some cash’’, women are more likely to have some readies than men, and cash use does not appear to be declining from levels measured a year ago, the survey of 3103 people, stratified by age, location, and ethnicity, with a margin of error of 1.8 percentage points, found.

It also discovered that ‘‘onethird of New Zealanders have New Zealand cash stored somewhere other than in a bank’’, although only 2% acknowledg­ed having more than $5000 stashed. Twothirds said they just wanted to be able to lay their hands on cash quickly when they needed it, and roughly onethird said they had $100 to $500 on hand. About half the population usually get between $20 and $100 from an ATM.

One in 10 people (10.8%) told researcher­s their first or second most important reason for using cash was that ‘‘payments are private — there’s no record of what I spent or where I spent it’’.

That made it the fifth most important reason for using cash.

Using cash at a market or roadside stall was the most important reason at 23.1%, while street donations and gifts were the main reasons for cash use for 4.8% of the population.

The second most important reason for using cash, at 15.2%, was to make small payments, while third most important was that it helped 6.4% of people to budget. One in 20, 5.4%, said using cash stopped them getting into debt.

The study found cash use is far higher among children under 13 than among 13to18 yearolds, and under13s ‘‘predominan­tly’’ use cash.

Some 58% of children under 13 were reported to use cash for payments while 42% of teenagers were reported to use an electronic bank card and 25% to use online payment options.

‘‘Although the difference­s in cash use frequency are not huge, the younger you are, the more likely you are to be using cash less frequently, or not at all. Older groups are using cash more frequently, and those over 45 years old are much more likely to have used cash in the last seven days,’’ the survey found.

Some 49% of New Zealanders said they could cope if cash was abolished, but 5% said they ‘‘could not cope’’. Some 40% thought it would make some situations difficult. — BusinessDe­sk

 ?? PHOTO: ?? Cash is king . . . among children and the elderly at least, a Reserve Bank study has found. ODT FILES
PHOTO: Cash is king . . . among children and the elderly at least, a Reserve Bank study has found. ODT FILES

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