The Jerusalem Post

Greeks fall in love with plastic cards after cash controls imposed

- • By ANGELIKI KOUTANTOU

ATHENS (Reuters) – A Greek TV commercial shows two fishmonger­s in a market touting their wares. “I’ve got sea bream,” one shouts. “Me too,” says the other. “I’ve got saddled sea bream,” the first cries. “So have I,” his rival retorts. “I take cards,” the first says, silencing his competitor, who pulls a long face.

Other commercial­s feature vets and pharmacist­s, all part of a campaign by banks to boost electronic payments in a country long dominated by cash. The drive is a boon for Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s government as it seeks to boost revenue and crack down on tax evasion.

Greece lags far behind other EU countries in noncash transactio­ns. But Greeks have suddenly fallen in love with payment by plastic after capital controls were imposed in late June and banks were shut for three weeks.

About one million cash cards were issued in July and August in a population of 11 million, compared to about 100,000 a month before the capital controls, said Athanasios Geramanis, the country manager for Mastercard, one of the four payment services available in the country.

“Consumers felt the urgent need to bypass the €60 withdrawal limit,” he said, referring to the daily cash ceiling Greece imposed in late June. The limit has since been eased to €420 a week.

“Greeks used to think that by getting a cash card they were taking out a bank loan,” Geramanis said. “All of a sudden they discovered that cash cards can help them in their transactio­ns.”

Card payments accounted for barely 6 percent of total annual retail sales before the capital restrictio­ns were imposed, compared to 60% in Denmark.

Geramanis estimated that the proportion of card transactio­ns had jumped to 25%-30% since the summer, although it would smooth out in the coming months.

This could help the government, which is plagued by widespread tax evasion and has promised internatio­nal lenders it would facilitate electronic payments to improve revenue collection under a third €86 billion bailout deal agreed to in August.

Businesses are required to issue a receipt for card payments that must be included in their revenue statements, meaning that tax authoritie­s are able to see each transactio­n and also crosscheck it with bank records.

Deputy Finance Minister Tryfon Alexiadis announced incentives last week to promote noncash payments in an effort to divert money from a huge gray economy that he said deprives state coffers of €15b. to €20b. in annual tax revenues.

“There will be incentives for citizens – first of all, tax incentives, a prize lottery, refunds from banks and businesses,” he told lawmakers.

There also would be tax incentives for businesses to help change the country’s payment culture, Alexiadis promised.

According to a study by management consultant­s A.T. Kearney, the shadow economy in Greece was equivalent to 24% of annual output in 2013. The European Commission estimated it at about one-quarter of gross domestic product in 2012.

‘ONE-WAY STREET’

Retailers, who already have some 150,000 card readers at their outlets, welcomed the measure, hoping it will boost sales because it overcomes the weekly withdrawal cash limit. They said they would need another 400,000 terminals to cover the retail sector’s needs as card usage rises.

Some shopkeeper­s were previously reluctant to switch to plastic, partly due to the extra cost. Merchants pay about €150 for a card reader plus a commission to the bank on each transactio­n, which can range from 1.2% to as much as 3.0% depending on the card issuer and the trader’s credit rating and annual sales.

“It’s a one-way street for us because of the capital controls,” said Vassilis Korkidis, the head of Greece’s merchants associatio­n. “As part of our ‘Cards everywhere’ campaign, we are having talks with the banks to get the lowest commission possible.”

He said they want the commission limited to between 0.8% and 1.1%.

Data from the associatio­n showed that about 45% of retail sales were done via plastic in July, compared with 15% a year earlier.

Alexiadis plans to make the use of cash and credit cards mandatory for profession­s such as doctors, dentists, lawyers, but also electricia­ns and plumbers, as of next year. He promised a reduction in the commission charged by banks.

Doctors, long considered one of the groups most prone to tax dodging, initially opposed using plastic for their payment, arguing that it would make them a target for tax authoritie­s and violate their patients’ confidenti­ality.

But they backed down after Alexiadis gave assurances they would not be singled out.

“We met Alexiadis, who explained to us that this won’t apply only to doctors, but gradually to every profession­al group, and that personal data will be protected,” said George Patoulis, the head of Athens doctors associatio­n. “After all these clarificat­ions, we have no reason to oppose the use of plastic money.”

Analysts said plastic should help in the battle against tax evasion, but it may take time.

“The shift toward an increased usage of plastic money may initially create difficulti­es to some groups, for example pensioners,” EFG Eurobank chief economist Platon Monokrouss­os said. “But in the long term, it could assist in fighting tax evasion, especially sales-tax evasion.”

 ?? (Alkis Konstantin­idis) ?? A WOMAN walks past a bank branch advertisin­g debit cards in Athens on Tuesday. Greece lags far behind other EU countries in noncash transactio­ns. But Greeks have suddenly fallen in love with payment by plastic after capital controls were imposed in...
(Alkis Konstantin­idis) A WOMAN walks past a bank branch advertisin­g debit cards in Athens on Tuesday. Greece lags far behind other EU countries in noncash transactio­ns. But Greeks have suddenly fallen in love with payment by plastic after capital controls were imposed in...

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