Scottish Daily Mail

Banks and politician­s seem hell bent making Britain a cashless society. But what about.. The shoppers who refuse to use anything but CASH

- by Sara Smyth

EVERY Thursday morning, Jacky Hailstone drives five miles into the centre of Kingston upon Hull, where she withdraws £70 from a cash machine and folds it into her empty purse.

This is her shopping budget for the next week and represents the amount left after she has carefully divvied up her pension into a number of savings accounts.

Jacky makes her way through the aisles in Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Aldi, hunting for the best deals on offer and paying in crisp £10 notes at the checkout.

The 70-year-old, a former personal assistant, doesn’t own a credit card and says she shops with cash 95 pc of the time.

‘I’ll always choose to use cash over a card,’ she says. ‘I go out of my way to avoid spending on cards.

‘It’s the best way to stick to my weekly budget and I don’t want to be tempted to spend more than I have.’ Jacky is one of the 2.7million people in the UK who rely solely on cash to do their normal shopping and rarely make a card payment.

But this army of shoppers — many of whom are pensioners or near retirement — are being threatened by a relentless drive towards a cashless society.

Banks have launched an attack on cash by stripping the High Street of free ATMs and encouragin­g customers to use tap-and-go contactles­s cards for small payments.

Thousands of free-to-use cash machines are at risk of closure in a major shake-up to the way they are funded.

These changes to the ATM network mean millions of people in rural areas could lose the ability to access bank notes on a daily basis.

As a result, spending in cash is on the decline. Cash is used in just 40pc of all transactio­ns and this number will halve again in the next eight years, according to banking trade body UK Finance.

Last week, the Government raised the prospect of scrapping 1p and 2p coins, saying they’re just not used any more.

The threat is so grave that, as part of his Spring Statement, Chancellor Philip Hammond published a consultati­on into how the Government can support a society where cash is vital to many people — but is quickly disappeari­ng.

Jacky is deeply unsettled by the thought of having to switch from cash to card payments, even if it is some way off.

Each Monday, her pension is paid directly into her account.

The grandmothe­r of five goes into her online banking and moves money into a series of accounts: one for Christmas and birthday presents; her Isa; an emergency pot for car repairs and insurance; and another for household bills.

Jacky rarely spends more than £25 each week on groceries and has around £45 left for petrol, eating out, going for a swim and other treats. She lives frugally, buying clothes from supermarke­ts and limiting herself to one weekend break every two years.

The only time she uses her debit card is to shop online when her local library is out of the latest murder-mystery novels, or to buy new seeds and gardening equipment for her vegetable patch.

The payments she makes are small, with the books, for example, costing around 75p and £2.50 for delivery. ‘That’s where the best deals are, so I make a rare exception,’ she says.

‘I’m old-fashioned and learned to budget from my mother. I think it’s short-sighted and irresponsi­ble to disregard cash or say we could get rid of pennies.

‘If politician­s were living on the salaries that some people do in Hull, they wouldn’t be so quick to get rid of coppers — a lot of people rely on them.’

JAnE DoUGH, 69, from West Byfleet, Surrey, also prefers to spend only in cash. Her stance, she says, stems from when she became uncomforta­ble with the idea that companies could collect vast amounts of data about her spending habits if she used a debit or credit card.

She fears everyone’s privacy is being eroded as banks railroad customers into going digital.

The retired executive personal assistant never shops online and, when her bank issued her with a contactles­s debit card, she sent it back, requesting one without the touch-and-go technology.

Banks have encouraged customers to use these high-tech cards as a quick and easy way of paying for small amounts of shopping. You can spend as much as £30 at a time without entering a PIn.

But official figuires show the boom in contactles­s payments has fuelled a 51pc rise in fraud on lost or stolen credit or debit cards in the past year.

Experts said that some of the increase in fraud may have been down to opportunis­tic thieves who are no longer stopped from spending on cards if they don’t have the PIn.

For someone like Jane, who is often nipping to ATMs, the risks of carrying around a small amount of cash seem less by comparison.

She says: ‘I don’t want scammers to be able to lift details from my card, and I felt like I’d be opening myself up to fraud if I used contactles­s.’

Jane juggled two credit cards when she was working and had greater financial demands.

When she retired ten years ago, she found she was spending less and had more time to manage her finances, so cancelled the cards for peace of mind. Each time someone spends on a credit or debit card, the details are logged by the bank and the card company it uses. So your bank can tell exactly where you are in the country, the name of the shop you are buying from, when you made the purchase and how much you spent there. Using this data, banks can build a picture of you as a consumer. It means that if someone steals your card and goes on a spending spree, a red flag will likely be raised on your account and it could be frozen to prevent further fraud. But they also use this informatio­n to push special offers based on spending habits. Some retailers build a profile of customers who pay by card. They assign shoppers an ID number and log each item they buy. This informatio­n can then be sold on to other retailers who can target you with adverts for similar products.

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