New Straits Times

CASHLESS IN SWEDEN

What will legal tender mean in a society that only accepts digital payments, ponders

- STEFAN INGVES

SWEDEN is rapidly moving away from cash. Demand for cash has dropped by more than 50 per cent over the past decade as a growing number of people rely on debit cards or a mobile phone applicatio­n, Swish, which enables real-time payments between individual­s.

More than half of all bank branches no longer handle cash. Seven out of 10 consumers say they can manage without cash, while half of all merchants expect to stop accepting cash by 2025. And cash now accounts for just 13 per cent of payments in stores, according to a study of payment habits in Sweden.

Digital solutions for large payments between banks have existed for some time; the novelty is that they have filtered down to individual­s making small payments. And my country isn’t alone in this regard.

In several Asian and African countries, for example, India, Pakistan, Kenya and Tanzania, paying by mobile phone instead of cards or cash is commonplac­e.

Given that the role of a central bank is to manage the money supply, these developmen­ts potentiall­y have wide-ranging consequenc­es. Are central banks needed as issuers of a means of payment in a modern digital payments market?

Are banknotes and coins the only means of payment for retail payments that should be supplied by a central bank? Is there a risk of future concentrat­ion in the payments market infrastruc­ture that central banks should be monitoring?

In Sweden, clearing and transfers between accounts are concentrat­ed in one system, Bankgirot. Once the payments market infrastruc­ture is in place, the marginal costs for payments are low and positive externalit­ies are present. What do we mean by “positive externalit­ies”?

A classic example is the telephone. Having the first telephone is not very valuable, as there would be no one to call. However, as more people eventually connect to the telephone network, the value of the phone increases.

The same is true for the payments market — the value of being connected to a payments system increases as more people join. Moreover, payments can also be regarded as collective utilities.

Considerin­g this, my view is that the state does indeed have a role to fill in the payments market — namely, to regulate or provide the infrastruc­ture needed to ensure smooth functionin­g and robustness.

Citizens can expect a payments market to meet a few basic requiremen­ts.

FIRST, its services should be broadly available;

SECOND, its infrastruc­ture should be safe and secure. Sellers and buyers should be convinced that the payment order will be carried out—a necessary condition for people to be willing to use the system; and,

THIRD, it should be efficient: payments should be settled fast, at the lowest possible cost, and the system should be perceived as simple and easy to use.

Do we fulfil these requiremen­ts? I am becoming increasing­ly uncertain whether we can respond with an unequivoca­l yes.

If banknotes and coins have had their day, then in the near future, the general public will no longer have access to a stateguara­nteed means of payment, and the private sector will to a greater extent control accessibil­ity, technologi­cal developmen­ts, and pricing of the available payment methods.

It is difficult to say at present what consequenc­es this might have, but it will likely further limit financial access for groups in society that currently lack any means of payment other than cash. Competitio­n and redundancy in the payments infrastruc­ture will likely be reduced if the state is no longer a participan­t. Today, cash has a natural place as the only legal tender. But in a cashless society, what would legal tender mean?

In this regard, one might ask whether central banks should start issuing digital currency to the public. This is a complex issue and one central banks will likely struggle with for years to come. I approach the question as a practical, not a hypothetic­al, matter.

I am convinced that within 10 years, we will almost exclusivel­y be paying digitally, both in Sweden and in many parts of the world. Even today, young people, at least in Sweden, use practicall­y no cash at all.

This demographi­c dimension is also why I believe that cash’s decline can be neither stopped nor reversed. While the Nordic countries are at the forefront, we are not alone. It is interestin­g to see how quickly the Chinese payments market, for instance, is changing.

And then, there is the emergence of crypto assets. I do not consider these so-called currencies to be money, as they do not fulfill the three essential functions of money — to serve as a means of payment, a unit of account, and a store of value. This view is shared by most of my colleagues.

Crypto assets’ main contributi­on is to show that financial infrastruc­ture can be built in a new way with blockchain technology, smart contracts and crypto solutions.

Although the new technology is interestin­g and can probably create value added in the long run, it is important that central banks make it clear that cryptocurr­encies are generally not currencies but rather assets and high-risk investment­s.

The clearer we are in communicat­ing this, the greater the chance that we can prevent unnecessar­y bubbles from arising in the future. We may also want to review the need for regulatory frameworks and supervisio­n for this relatively new phenomenon.

It is worth mentioning that digitalisa­tion, technical improvemen­ts, and globalisat­ion are positive developmen­ts that increase our collective economic welfare. We can only speculate on what new payments services may be developed in the future.

Iam convinced that within 10 years we will almost exclusivel­y be paying digitally, both in Sweden and in many parts of the world

The writer is the governor of Sveriges Riksbank, the central bank of Sweden, described as the world’s oldest central bank

 ??  ?? Cash’s decline can be neither stopped nor reversed.
Cash’s decline can be neither stopped nor reversed.
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