Daily Mail

Lloyds Bank will pay small shops to offer free cashback

- By Victoria Bischoff and James Burton

BRITAIN’s biggest bank is to pay small shopkeeper­s to offer cashback to customers in areas where ATMs are disappeari­ng.

It is hoped the move will increase the free access to cash as well as help save struggling local shops, such as newsagents, greengroce­rs and butchers, by boosting the number of shoppers popping in.

Lloyds’ scheme marks the first time a bank will pay small stores to offer cashback – a service already provided by large supermarke­ts – and follows a Daily Mail campaign to protect access to basic bank services amid the closure of thousands of branches.

The cashback service, in partnershi­p with visa, will be available to customers of all banks, not just those with a Lloyds account.

vim Maru, group director for retail banking at Lloyds, said: ‘Our cashback pilot aims to increase the number of places where people can withdraw money, particular­ly in those areas which are under-served by free-to-use ATMs. The unlocked potential of cashback is obvious, as there are literally tens of thousands of local shops up and down our high streets that already have all the infrastruc­ture in place to offer this service.’

To begin with, customers will have to make a purchase using their debit card in order to get cashback, but in future this may not be necessary. In return for providing the service, the bank will pay shops a set fee – expected to be between 20p and 25p per transactio­n.

Lloyds – which has shut more than 1,200 bank branches since the financial crisis in 2008, pulling out of rural and coastal towns across the UK – said it will trial the scheme among 12 retailers this spring, with a view to rolling it out to about 50,000 later this year. It has chosen shops in towns and villages where access to cash has been identified as being more difficult, such as rural or less affluent areas which often rely on a small number of ATMs.

One greengroce­r in stockbridg­e, hampshire, has already been offering Lloyds’ scheme.

Beccy soper of Beccy’s Green- grocers said: ‘I feel that offering cashback is an important thing to do for the town. There aren’t many other options around here. From a business point of view, anything that brings extra customers on to our high street is obviously very welcome. But there are also other benefits that aren’t as obvious, like paying out more cash from my till which means I don’t need to make as many trips to the bank to deposit my takings.’

however, critics have accused Lloyds’ branch closures of helping to create so- called ‘cash machine deserts’ where it is impossible to withdraw cash.

Lloyds also successful­ly lobbied for a cut in the fees which banks pay when account-holders take money out of an independen­t operator’s cash machine. The cut made it harder for these firms to turn a profit and has been blamed for causing huge numbers of ATMs to be shut, with 2,500 lost last year.

Jenny Ross, money editor at consumer watchdog Which?, said: ‘It is right that banks are taking steps to address concerns about access to cash, but these can only attempt to solve the problem in the short-term.

‘Cashback is not an adequate substitute for ATMs or bank branches, and it’s essential that communitie­s continue to have access to their money free of charge for as long as they need it.’

 ??  ?? The Mail, February 12
The Mail, February 12

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