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Swedes Turn Against Cashlessness (theguardian.com) 403

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: It is hard to argue that you cannot trust the government when the government isn't really all that bad. This is the problem facing the small but growing number of Swedes anxious about their country's rush to embrace a cash-free society. Most consumers already say they manage without cash altogether, while shops and cafes increasingly refuse to accept notes and coins because of the costs and risk involved. Until recently, however, it has been hard for critics to find a hearing. "The Swedish government is a rather nice one, we have been lucky enough to have mostly nice ones for the past 100 years," says Christian Engstrom, a former MEP for the Pirate Party and an early opponent of the cashless economy. "In other countries there is much more awareness that you cannot trust the government all the time. In Sweden it is hard to get people mobilized."

There are signs this might be changing. In February, the head of Sweden's central bank warned that Sweden could soon face a situation where all payments were controlled by private sector banks. The Riksbank governor, Stefan Ingves, called for new legislation to secure public control over the payments system, arguing that being able to make and receive payments is a "collective good" like defense, the courts, or public statistics. "Most citizens would feel uncomfortable to surrender these social functions to private companies," he said. "It should be obvious that Sweden's preparedness would be weakened if, in a serious crisis or war, we had not decided in advance how households and companies would pay for fuel, supplies and other necessities."
The report mentions a recently-released opinion poll, which found that seven out of 10 Swedes wanted to keep the option to use cash, while just 25% wanted a completely cashless society.
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Swedes Turn Against Cashlessness

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  • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @01:06AM (#56377961)
    Why would you want a cashless society? Having the ability to pay in cash doesn't require you to do so yourself. I can't wrap my head around the fact that there are some people who actively want fewer choices even when the alternative options require nothing from them in terms of action or cost. Even from a business owner's perspective, there's nothing that says your business has to accept cash payments, unless there's some obscure Swedish laws of which I'm unaware.
    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @01:19AM (#56377995)

      Even from a business owner's perspective, there's nothing that says your business has to accept cash payments

      But if few businesses accept cash, and you can't actually use cash to buy groceries, then you have a de facto cashless society.

      For businesses, cash means crime. Both employee theft and robberies. Cash transactions are also slower than just waving your phone, which raises costs. Cashless self-checkout kiosks are cheaper and less error prone than those that handle cash.

      I spent two months working in Shanghai last fall. I ate hundreds of meals, visited dozens of shops, and exchanged money with co-workers. Of all those transactions, this many involved cash: 0.

      • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @01:27AM (#56378025)

        Cash transactions are also slower than just waving your phone

        I can just wave my phone? Do I have to flip it open, or can I leave it shut? And how do I pay to refill the phone with the phone?

        I spent two months working in Shanghai last fall.

        Of course the Chinese are going to have a system in place to track everything you do.

        • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @01:47AM (#56378091)

          I can just wave my phone? Do I have to flip it open, or can I leave it shut?

          I have no idea how it works in Sweden, but in China you use an app to scan the merchants QR-code, and then enter a 6 digit PIN and/or use finger/face ID to confirm the transaction. It typically takes about two seconds. I set up my phone to use fingerprint only for transactions under 100CNY ($15 USD) and require both PIN and fingerprint for larger amounts.

          And how do I pay to refill the phone with the phone?

          You can top-up your balance by linking your WeChat or AliPay app to your bank account. This requires an additional bank PIN. Or, if you don't have a Chinese bank account, you can ask a friend to send you a "hong bao" peer-to-peer transfer.

          Of course the Chinese are going to have a system in place to track everything you do.

          They already have that and there is no secret about it. I was just there to get my job done, so I go along with the system, obey the law, and keep out of trouble. They certainly aren't going to change their policies because I object. As an American, it is not my job to "fix" China.

          • in China you use an app to scan the merchants QR-code, and then enter a 6 digit PIN and/or use finger/face ID to confirm the transaction. It typically takes about two seconds.

            That all sounds like it takes more than two second.

            Do they not take cash in China?

            • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @02:24AM (#56378195)

              That all sounds like it takes more than two second.

              It only takes more than 2 secs if you don't already have the WeChat app open. But that is rare in China. WeChat is like SMS, voice mail, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Skype, Facetime, PayPal, plus a lot more, all rolled into one app. If you see a pedestrian in America, there is maybe a 50% chance that they aren't watching where they are going because their eyes and attention are on their phone. In China, it is at least 90%.

              Even if you don't already have WeChat open, you can open it while you wait in the checkout line, so by the time you get to front, all you have to do is scan and tap.

              Do they not take cash in China?

              Most merchants still take cash, but more and more do not. As cash users dwindle, it just isn't worth the hassle and risk for businesses to keep cash on hand. Any merchant can accept e-payments, even informal unregistered businesses. A farmer was selling apples out of a wagon on the street in front of my apartment ... with a WeChat QR-code sticker on his scale. Just weigh, scan, and go.

              • Most merchants still take cash, but more and more do not. As cash users dwindle, it just isn't worth the hassle and risk for businesses to keep cash on hand. Any merchant can accept e-payments, even informal unregistered businesses. A farmer was selling apples out of a wagon on the street in front of my apartment ... with a WeChat QR-code sticker on his scale. Just weigh, scan, and go.

                China sounds like a trip now. I was there in the 90s, studying martial arts in Wudang, and it was still pretty bare bones.

          • you can ask a friend to send you a "hong bao"

            Is that with chicken, pork or beef?

        • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @06:52AM (#56378933) Journal

          I can just wave my phone? Do I have to flip it open, or can I leave it shut? And how do I pay to refill the phone with the phone?

          Not sure about Sweden, but in the UK most places now do contactless EMV transactions with either a phone or a card. If you use a card, you just put it on the terminal and about a second later it beeps and it's done. If you use a phone, it's the same thing but you have to touch the fingerprint sensor as well (for Apple Pay, I've never seen anyone use Google Pay). I prefer to have a separate physical token that doesn't have the ability to run malware, so I don't use the phone, but with the card it takes less time than for cash:

          • Both need me to get my wallet out of my pocket.
          • Both need me to get something out of my wallet.
          • Only cash requires me to get out a quantity that differs depending on my final amount (so I can't get it out until that's calculated).
          • Both require me to hand something over, but in the case of the card I just tap it on the reader for a second, for cash I hand it across the counter or feed it into a machine.
          • Only cash requires someone to calculate change and give it to me.

          My local convenience has self-service checkouts and it takes their UI a couple of seconds to step through the payment screen. I pop my card on the card reader before I tap the last step of the UI and it's done by the time I reach over to pick it up again.

          • I don't trust contactless EMV cards' security, both with the ability to protect my cash and the ability of people to track my presence from afar with specialty readers. I do like chip cards over the magnetic stripe.

            And certainly, securing a phone with a fingerprint, giving my fingerprints to Apple/Google, and having a phone capable of running malware (as opposed to being a phone) all seem stupid. To say nothing of making part of my day an unpaid minimum wage worker at a self-service checkout, as opposed t

          • by Malc ( 1751 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @09:14AM (#56379719)

            This is all great... once weâ(TM)re cashless youâ(TM)ll love the convenience of negative interest rates or addition transaction taxes or fees.

            Iâ(TM)ve gone back to using cash. Itâ(TM)s really not that inconvenient. And if you choose human interaction instead of the checkout machines, not only will you be annoyed less by the irritating machine, youâ(TM)ll have time to pack your bag whilst somebody faster and more efficient scans it and have some fun calculating the perfect amount to get fewer coins back in your change. Oh, and a moment of human interaction.

            • This is all great... once weÃ(TM)re cashless youÃ(TM)ll love the convenience of negative interest rates or addition transaction taxes or fees.

              I respect the fact that some of you like to run your posts through word or librewrite before you post. I do the same thing on some of my longer posts. But when you do post, please make sure you copy and paste as pure ascii text. Slashdot isn't smart enough to figure out smart quotes and other shit word and writer will stick in there.

              Thank you, drive through.....

      • by Khyber ( 864651 ) <techkitsune@gmail.com> on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @01:45AM (#56378079) Homepage Journal

        "Cash transactions are also slower than just waving your phone, which raises costs."

        Every place I go where they need me to use a fucking chipped card, it takes about 15 seconds for the transaction. As a former cashier, I could've done the entire transaction in my head and had the change in the customer's hands in less than ten seconds.

        Might be slower for you now because of all the clueless millennials in retail positions.

        • Every place I go where they need me to use a fucking chipped card, it takes about 15 seconds for the transaction.

          Countries currently going "cashless" are not doing it with chipped cards. You pay with your phone. Scan, tap, go.

          • by Anonymous Coward

            I'm Swedish. We use chipped cards a lot. But here, they work properly.

            What moved us towards cashlessness though was "Swish", an app for instant money transfer between any two users, regardless of which banks they have. iZettle is also pretty common in small businesses; it's a chip card reader that connects to an ordinary smartphone or tablet.

            This shift was rapid. Three years ago I had 55000 sek (about 6500 us$) in cash to deposit after the annual skydiving boogie our club arranges. Last year there wasn't en

            • But you have to trust these odd startup companies with your cash. I don't trust them. Everyone's spying on everyone, and since they're startups the security is abysmally bad. Too many people are just far too trusting with new technology. A little bit of Luddite paranoia is a good thing.

          • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

            Countries currently going "cashless" are not doing it with chipped cards. You pay with your phone. Scan, tap, go.

            I've been practically cashless for the last 10 years. I paid for everything with my debit card up until lately. I got the samsung pay app on my phone. I set it up just to try it out to see if it is more convenient. It is and now I pay for practically everything with a tap of my phone. It is faster and it is better.

        • As a former cashier, I could've done the entire transaction in my head and had the change in the customer's hands in less than ten seconds.

          As a former cashier you're not normal. What happens in the real world is a person spends some 15 seconds fucking around with their wallet and counting out before handing it to a cashier who as a professional math whizz will have it counted and change returned in mere seconds.

          Cashiers aren't the holdup.

          By the way what the hell takes you 15 seconds? For transactions under €25 it takes me less than 3 seconds to pay including the delay it takes to authorise. For over €25 it takes maybe 6 seconds. The

          • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

            By the way what the hell takes you 15 seconds? For transactions under â25 it takes me less than 3 seconds to pay including the delay it takes to authorise

            That is been my experience. Most of the time when i pay for something with my phone. If it takes more than 10 seconds its because the cashier is staring at me wondering if I just paid for something with my phone.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Cash transactions are also slower than just waving your phone

        The downside is that anyone who pays by waving their phone looks like a total douche.

        I'm not kidding. Has anyone seen a person pay by waving their phone and NOT thought, "That person looks like a total douche"?

        • Sure, that's why all the new point-of-sales terminals have the Look Like A Total Douche symbol on top so I know where to rest my iPhone. Much faster than using chip cards.

          Meanwhile, what actually burns up time at the checkout is waiting for Greatest Generation Great Grandma to haul out her checkbook, laboriously write out her fiscal epistle, and get it approved by a manager.

      • by Archfeld ( 6757 ) <treboreel@live.com> on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @02:02AM (#56378133) Journal

        So who is going to buy me a smart phone, and pay for a data plan ? I don't have one and I don't want one. My simple dumb Trac phone with just text and phone service is cheap easy and my choice. I have a visa/debit card that I keep for emergency use only, and I have to remind myself to use it for an inquiry once every 90 days or the damn credit union suspends it. As a contractor I am paid by certified check thru my contracting office rather than by the current employer. I use and cash for almost everything except monthly bills which are paid out of my checking account via automatic withdrawal. Does my dope dealer have to pay square or some vendor to stay in business ? How do I give the 'vet' hanging out on the corner a couple of bucks for hamburger evey now and then. Uncle Sam is up in my grill enough with having every dollar I choose to spend analyzed by them.

        • How do I give the 'vet' hanging out on the corner a couple of bucks for hamburger evey now and then.

          You use your phone to scan the QR-code on his phone, or if he doesn't have a phone, you scan the QR-code sticker on the corner of his "Please Help" sign.

          You really have no idea. Most bums in China accept both WeChat and AliPay. Likewise, most Swedish bums likely take Swish (never been to Sweden (not into blondes)). Peer-to-peer payments are trivial.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • The store will not keep the credit card number, so unless I have a store card, they will not be able to link sales to me

            Note that they are not allowed to store the card number, but they are allowed to store a cryptographic hash of the card number and they are allowed to store the last few digits. A typical card number is about 53 bits, so storing a 256-bit hash means that the probability of a collision is so close to zero that they have an effectively unique identifier. Oh, and I think that they're also allowed to store the name on the card.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Archfeld ( 6757 )

        Cash if FAR cheaper. Having to accept credit cards entails a hefty surcharge by the credit card company, as well as a delay in getting paid, and the additional risk of credit card fraud. While a debit card is faster and cheaper it still involves network fees and equipment rental and service.

        • Are you sure? I was talking to some cannabis shop owners who claim that handling cash is about the same cost as handling plastic. You have to account for shrinkage, time spent counting, employees making deposits, etc.
        • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @02:48AM (#56378279)

          Cash if FAR cheaper. Having to accept credit cards entails a hefty surcharge by the credit card company

          I was in China for two months last fall, witnessed thousands of cashless transactions, and this is how many times I saw anyone use a credit card: 0.

          Cashless payments ARE NOT BASED ON CREDIT CARDS.

          as well as a delay in getting paid,

          WeChat and AliPay are instant transfers.

          ... and the additional risk of credit card fraud.

          Credit card fraud is an AMERICAN problem. In other countries I can't spend your money just by providing semi-public information. Only Americans believe that is "the way it is supposed to be".

          While a debit card is faster and cheaper it still involves network fees and equipment rental and service.

          Equipment needed to accept cashless payments in China: A sticker with a QR-code. Cost: 2 cents.

          • Equipment needed to accept cashless payments in China: A sticker with a QR-code. Cost: 2 cents.

            How does the phone/bank/whoever know the amount I want to pay? I guess the shop needs a networked computer of some sorts after all, right?

            • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @04:42AM (#56378567)

              How does the phone/bank/whoever know the amount I want to pay?

              At many shops, the price is embedded in a QR-code that appears on a LCD screen. You just scan it and tap to confirm. At low end shops, such as street stalls without electricity, there is a fixed QR-code sticker and the vendor just tells you the price. You key it in and tap your fingerprint to authorize.

              I guess the shop needs a networked computer of some sorts after all, right?

              No. In theory, the merchant can just look at your phone to see that the transaction completed. In practice, they will usually also have their cell phone which will display the completed transaction. Everything is cell phone based, and there is no wired network, nor even a need for electricity other than your cell battery.

        • Cash if FAR cheaper. Having to accept credit cards entails a hefty surcharge by the credit card company, as well as a delay in getting paid, and the additional risk of credit card fraud. While a debit card is faster and cheaper it still involves network fees and equipment rental and service.

          AFAIK cash is now more expensive to handle. Surcharges have decreased, chips has driven fraud close to zero (in over the counter retail), interest rates are practically nothing and terminals and network are cheap even for very small businesses. The cost of handling/storing/transporting cash is way up due to decreased volumes and higher safety standards (it's no longer socially acceptable that someone gets robbed due to their proffession). That's why in places like Sweden cash is disappearing fast. If you do

          • Surcharges have decreased

            In China, they have gone to zero. There are no cashless transaction fees as far as I can see. The amount received is alway exactly the same as the amount sent.

            I guess they make money on the data, and on the float. If a billion users each have $1000 CNY ($150 USD) in their account, that is a trillion CNY ($150B USD) of float. The data must also be worth a lot. Google makes billion and billions, and knowing my search terms is a lot less useful than knowing what/when/where I buy. So the data collected b

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              The government encourages it too, because aside from the surveillance it also means that people pay sales tax.

        • Cash if FAR cheaper. Having to accept credit cards entails a hefty surcharge by the credit card company

          Maybe in your country. In mine:

          Having debit cards is essentially free. Having credit cards has a very tiny surcharge thanks to none of these stupid packages offered by every credit card company as a reward that are passed on to the shop which is passed back onto the consumer who thinks they got something out of the deal. The risk of credit card fraud is essentially zero with modern chip+pin and where it exists the consumer is 100% protected.

          By comparison dealing with cash involves handling cash which involv

        • With cash you need physical security, fraud checks to make sure employers do not skim money, protection when transporting money to the bank, safes for overnight storage of cash registers.

          Handling cash is extremely expensive. All you need for credit cards is a card reader and a phone.

        • There was an article about this on Slashdot a few years ago. It's not so clear cut. If you handle cash, there are a bunch of extra costs. You must store it securely, you must transport it securely to the bank, you must pay higher insurance premiums for cash on the premises, you must balance all of your tills, and so on. When the study was done, these costs are lower than the card surcharge for companies with a very low turnover, but I think the break-even point was around $100K, at which point taking ca
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Why would you want a cashless society? Having the ability to pay in cash doesn't require you to do so yourself. I can't wrap my head around the fact that there are some people who actively want fewer choices even when the alternative options require nothing from them in terms of action or cost.

        As an individual, no, you don't want that. Cash-in-hand carries some obvious risks like loss or theft, and a few less obvious ones, like (hyper)inflation and devaluation. Money-in-the-bank comes with a "we won't steal from you, honest"-promise that is usually a national scandal if it gets broken, but it does happen like when a bank goes AWOL or bust overnight. Then there's the loss of control ("Cyprus template"). The obvious problems and their mitigations are well-known and well-understood. The other stuff,

        • For governments, cashless means unprecedented control. You know, civil forfeiture with less smell of "the government is stealing from me!" Which is exactly why economists are creaming their pants at the idea. Bank problem? Just steal everybody's bank balances and done. Bank runs? Impossible because without cash nobody can get their money out. Monetary policy, no matter how onerous, becomes much easier to just force onto the population. And so on.

          This one argument alone is far more important and compelling than all your other ones put together. And it's ironic that some of us here who have been so against DRM, SaaS, Facebook and Google, are either blase about or actively support the demise of cash money. As far as I'm concerned they are all of a piece. They are all examples of the powerful extending their control further and further over every aspect of our lives. Ultimately, they all reduce our freedom and our autonomy. It seems that some here are

      • Cash transactions are also slower than just waving your phone, which raises costs.

        Not in my experience. (Note that self-service kiosks aren't really a thing outside of vending machines where I live so my experience always involves cashiers.) For cashless you have to tell the cashier to use a card, wait for them to turn on the card/NFC terminal, wait for the terminal to recognize the card/device, wait for the server to issue a challenge, enter your pin and then wait for your response to be verified. Takes twenty seconds if everything goes well and up to a minute if something goes wrong an

        • Cash transactions are also slower than just waving your phone, which raises costs.

          Not in my experience.

          You should get a passport and expand your experiences. There are many things America does well. Consumer retail transactions are not one of them. The rest of the world is WAY ahead.

        • Enabling the card reader is a single button press on most tills, and is now the default here on more modern ones, with the cashier having to press a 'cash payment' button if you want to take it. Tapping the card on the contactless reader means moving your hand less far towards the person than if you were handing them cash, because the reader is right next to you, and then it takes about a second to validate and you're done. If it's taking more than a second, that implies that the store is still using a mo
      • Of all those transactions, this many involved cash: 0.

        Even the hookers, blow and blackjack?

        • Of all those transactions, this many involved cash: 0.

          Even the hookers, blow and blackjack?

          You have to go to Macau for blackjack. The hookers on Nanjing Lu (a huge pedestrian mall in downtown Shanghai) accept cashless transactions. Why not? Cash transactions are especially dangerous in their profession.

    • One guess, it minimizes fraud. Cash payments made "under the table" take away from tax revenue resulting in increased tax rates for those who pay their taxes. It is sort of like shoplifting - costs just get passed on to those that do not steal / do pay their taxes. Worse yet, many of those who get paid discretely still try to benefit from the social safety net. This increases the cost to taxpayers even more.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • A lot of people want "progress" because it's new and different. They also want self-driving cars that will make their cars illegal to drive (and they won't be afford). They seem unable to process that adding technology isn't always a good thing. Anyway, off to vote on a computer with no paper trail...

    • by lucm ( 889690 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @01:37AM (#56378057)

      It's a bank scam. They want to avoid a situation like Japan or Iceland where people started to buy safes to keep cash at home because negative interest rates meant that banks were charging fees for cash deposits.

      The whole banking system in Europe is corrupt. From Ambrosiano to Libor scandals, from the Swiss hoarding nazi gold to HSBC laundering drug money, from Latvian banksters to Maltese murderers, it's a huge network of thieves and common criminals. Even Wells Fargo and their fake accounts don't come close to the level of European crooks.

    • It sounds like the motive for this "cashless" system is to keep the increasingly-widespread use of electronic payments from being completely controlled by private parties like banks. What doesn't make any sense to me is why the government can't just roll out a public electronic payment system, to compete with the private ones (with the advantage of not having to turn a profit doing so), which it can leave just as they are without shutting them down... and also continue having the public cash system as well.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Governments get to know what your buying.
      Governments get to stop tax avoidance on every transaction.

      On some type of pension?
      Governments get to set up no buy lists. No alcoholic beverages. No smoking. Buying magazines and publications gets totally restricted. No gambling on a pension. No holidays to other nations.
      Spending on education gets more support. Stop attending approved education and the gov support stops.
      The obligations to keep getting support on an allowance card start to become a lo
    • Why would you want a cashless society? Having the ability to pay in cash doesn't require you to do so yourself.

      Depends who you are. Having the ability to pay cash requires you to cover the expenses of handling cash. Businesses are proponents of cash-less systems as it reduces the cost of handling and banking cash, increases security through theft avoidance (both external and via employees), and also reduces time.

      From a personal point of view I hate handling cash with a passion. I don't carry any on me unless I travel to a card-unfriendly country. The only cash I have around me is a few coins for the occasional parki

    • >Why would you want a cashless society?

      Because it will cost money to society to support an option of cash

    • It's pretty simple. Cashless is convenience and if you trust the system that is good value. If you do not trust the system the current one or a possible future one, then cashless means relinguishing control, especially if you lose the option to freely use cashless (that is, with a low threshold, so it has to be easy). Multiple players love getting that control. It means having a record of all your transactions, and having the option to make money with them in all possible manners, including negative interes

  • Cash is king (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Khyber ( 864651 ) <techkitsune@gmail.com> on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @01:50AM (#56378101) Homepage Journal

    No matter what anyone says, when power goes out and communications infrastructure goes to shit or gets attacked, regular hard currency will still work until the human race forgets how to add and subtract.

    • by Corbets ( 169101 )

      until the human race forgets how to add and subtract.

      Have you been to America lately?

    • There was someone on slashdot who had invested heavily in bitcoin. He lived in Puerto Rico. He signed on shortly after the hurricane and had no way to buy goods (or maybe he had a little cash, but was very worried.).

  • by master_p ( 608214 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @02:01AM (#56378127)

    Cash doesn't have to be paper. An electronic unit with a battery that can hold an electronic counter can function perfectly as an electronic version of cash, without involving banks and going through bank transactions each time.

    It seems this option is totally ignored by everyone though.

    • We tried that in Sweden. It was even called "Cash", and was an added function on your credit/debit card. The banks forced all shops etc to replace their card terminals at great expense. Nobody understood what the point was, so it was completely ignored. Now it is gone and the embarrassment forgotten.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @03:00AM (#56378297)

    That part of the submission confused me - if payment is offered and If it’s the coin of the realm, how can they legally decline it? It’s not like “cashless” transactions aren’t using the same currency.

    • by DrTJ ( 4014489 )

      There are plenty of shops and restaurants in Swden that have signs with "we are cash free".

      They have the right to accept or decline anyone as a customer, so they just think they can live without the customers who insist on using cash.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        How does a tourist pay for anything?

        But wait....my phone was stolen, lost, or broken...now what? Go get another phone, but how do I pay for THAT?

        Or I'm only there for 2 days and a night, I don't need a phone to do what I need. Is there something else that can do the electronic transfer that isn't a phone (and should be super cheap)?

        I forget my wallet with cash and stuff all the time...or leave it behind for safety)...no problem, stop by a bank branch and get some cash for a day or two (or at least dinner)

    • by dwywit ( 1109409 )

      It says on many currencies "good for debts public and private", but if there's a decently-readable "No Cash" sign on the front door (before your transaction begins, i.e. before you incur the debt), then the business is within its rights to specify how they will accept payment.

      If that information isn't made available before the debt is incurred, e.g. no sign, and they've already made your coffee, then you can offer cash, and no reasonable magistrate is going to convict you (even if the police could be bother

      • by hankwang ( 413283 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @04:35AM (#56378523) Homepage

        And on many currencies it doesn't say "good for debts public and private". I checked the law for the Netherlands (Euro zone, unlike Sweden) some time ago. Here: "legal tender" mostly means means that you're not allowed to copy it. There is no rule that someone has to accept banknotes or coins even for settling a debt. Try paying your phone bill using one-cent coins... many smaller (MVNO) providers don't even have a physical store.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Currency is changed to a cashless card. Only money is slowly and then fully removed after education and a change over.
    • if payment is offered and If it’s the coin of the realm, how can they legally decline it?

      Just because something exists doesn't make it a legal mandate. You're probably confused because you don't understand the legal mandate, even in the USA.

      Just because something is legal tender does not mean it needs to be accepted for services rendered. All it means is that legally the *government* and a registered creditor must accept is as a method of extinguishing debt. i.e. the only people who care about legal tender are the government collecting fees and taxes, and your bank which legally must if request

    • Solution via annoyance:

      Locate any store that doesn't accept physical currency, have cash on hand for full very large transaction.

      Select a massive amount of stuff and head to register.

      Oh what, you don't take physical currency, restock your shelves.

      Make sure to take only one of everything, and from all about the store. Especially frozen stuff, it has be be put back quickly or discarded.

      Open a soda to drink while you are shopping. Oh wait, you won't even accept payment for it? Thanks!

    • by Turmio ( 29215 )
      Handling small but valuable physical objects (coins, notes) is expensive (transport, local storage, theft). Proper secure processes related to the said assets is not the core business of any company. That's why you want to get rid of it. It's not the name of the currency that matters, it's the burden of maintaining various channels required to handle the different kinds of transactions using the same currency. While not free, the electronic channels are cheaper business expense than physical. This may not b
  • by AbRASiON ( 589899 ) * on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @03:49AM (#56378413) Journal

    A country once to envy, now, I'd be inclined to avoid most things they say and do. Total head in the sand people over there.

    • I don't see how desiring anonymous payment processes is backward. At present cash is the only anonymous scalable transaction system. You might suggest crypto currencies but at present they're not practical as a mass consumer market payment system. There are exchanges offering Visa cards, but this isn't any better than a normal Visa card, all your transactions go through the Visa card system and are tracked!

      Do you really want everything you buy, the quantity you purchase it in, the time you purchase it an

  • Normally a superior solution (like a bank card) would out phase another, but what is happening here is that the banks are working hard to to make cashless "fashionable modern".
    Swedish people hate to not be "modern" and embrace it without any second thought.
    There are shops not accepting cash and this is considered a "Good Thing".
    Most bank offices are "cashless"
    I have heard swedes argue that we must remove the cash, because it costs to much.
    Banks have done a good PR job.
    There needs to be better regulati
  • by Bert64 ( 520050 ) <bert@[ ]shdot.fi ... m ['sla' in gap]> on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @04:06AM (#56378453) Homepage

    The problem with the various cashless options is that a lot of them are country or region specific, so when you have tourists visiting it's often difficult for them to make use of the local payment systems,especially since many such systems disallow registration from users outside of the country.

  • while shops and cafes increasingly refuse to accept notes and coins because of the costs and risk involved.

    Isn't notes and coins the LEAST costly, and by some extension, less risk involved than most other payments?
    Aren't there transaction fees to most payment methods to begin with? What am I missing here?

  • by AdaStarks ( 2634757 ) on Wednesday April 04, 2018 @09:46AM (#56379955)

    The remaining half a Swede could not be reached for comment.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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