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The Almighty Buck Australia

Strongest Sign Yet Australia Heads Toward a Totally Cashless Society? (9news.com.au) 180

The Australian news service 9News reports on the "strongest sign yet" that Australia is headed toward a "totally cashless society... the number of notes in circulation officially declining for the first time since dollars and cents were introduced in 1966." According to data from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), more than a billion dollars worth of physical cash disappeared from circulation in the last financial year, a shift that's likely to make life more difficult for the elderly and for those in the regions. Authorities say less cash will also hurt the nation's criminals, who rely heavily on its use, making it harder for them to make transactions undetected...

The RBA's survey of consumers' payment trends revealed that a third of Aussies now consider themselves "low cash users" — meaning they claim to use cash for less than 20 per cent of all their in-person transactions. In 2019, about half of the nation's residents were reported as such... It's expected that cash use will continue to decrease in the coming years, similar to the use of cheques, which are set to wrap up completely in the country by 2030.

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Strongest Sign Yet Australia Heads Toward a Totally Cashless Society?

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  • Bad example. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by armada ( 553343 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @08:41PM (#63745654)
    I hope they get there as quickly as possible. That way, the rest of the world will have a real world example of what a terrible idea it was.
    • actually sweden is the example

      frankly australian banks have very little clue about outflows and blindly allow transfers without real authorisation (cryptographic) they will allow a internet transfer without a key just a SMS and when SMS can be spoofed it allows all kind of proxies to be setup and real loss's to the consumer

      • why is this kind of bank robbery the customers problem?
        • by hjf ( 703092 )

          because while you can claim you didn't make the transfer, the money is gone already. you may get it back, but it'll take weeks.

          also the reason why credit cards are better than debit in this regard. when there's a fraudulent charge on your debit card, the money is already gone. if it's to your credit card, it's still the bank's money, not yours.

          • also the reason why credit cards are better than debit in this regard. when there's a fraudulent charge on your debit card, the money is already gone. if it's to your credit card, it's still the bank's money, not yours.

            Yep, that's the reason I've long refused to have a debit card....I stick with plain credit cards and ATM card for when I want cash out.

            I did run into one thing recently that was new...I was looking to make a large ticket purchase.

            I have the cash in hand, but when offered things like 24mos

    • Re:Bad example. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @09:13PM (#63745708)

      Indeed. On the other hand "first declining since 1966" and "totally cashless" seem to be pretty far removed from each other...

    • Re:Bad example. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by labnet ( 457441 ) on Monday August 07, 2023 @12:17AM (#63745996)

      Australia have always been a test ground for new technology. Our retail banking system is far ahead of the USA's fragmented system and most aussies use NFC for retail transactions....
      but as the parent says, cashless is a huge danger because you can suddenly become person non grata.
      It's already happened in canada, where bank accounts were closed for merely donating to the trucker protest.
      Don't think for one second a private bank will either de customer you or a govt command a bank to freeze your account, then you're back to barter!

      • Re:Bad example. (Score:5, Informative)

        by armada ( 553343 ) on Monday August 07, 2023 @12:45AM (#63746016)
        The first time I saw this behavior was many years ago when Paypal, Visa, Mastercard, and Amex refused to process payments for donations to wikileaks. https://www.forbes.com/sites/a... [forbes.com]
      • by MysteriousPreacher ( 702266 ) on Monday August 07, 2023 @01:42AM (#63746062) Journal

        It also happened recently to Nigel Farage, leading to quite the unlucky scandal and the resignation of the NatWest CEO. Tommy Robinson faced similar issues. If they can do this to public figures, imagine what they can do to private individuals with few resources?

        A cashless society is something dictators of the past could only dream of.

      • by mjwx ( 966435 )

        Australia have always been a test ground for new technology. Our retail banking system is far ahead of the USA's fragmented system and most aussies use NFC for retail transactions....

        Erm... Which Australia are you talking about?

        Australia has always been behind the rest of the world. Usually the last developed country to get anything. Compared to the European and UK banking systems of 8 years ago, the Australian banking system is positively antiquated. It wasn't until a few years ago when you could near instantly send money to another bank account, the UK has had it's Faster Payments system in place since before I got here in 2015 and still in Australia it "may" take 24 hours for a t

    • This is like the prepper hoping that an asteroid or zombie apocalypse starts just to validate their opinion and tell others I told you so.

      There's nothing terrible about a society being cashless. Australia is far behind many other countries in this regard. There are many people in the world who simply do not handle cash anymore and have shown to be perfectly functional. I myself haven't touched cash other than on holidays or on business trips in other countries for about 3 years now.

      • Re:Bad example. (Score:4, Interesting)

        by martin-boundary ( 547041 ) on Monday August 07, 2023 @03:27AM (#63746192)
        True, for a single society in a vacuum money can be arbitrary and the more convenient the better.

        For a society in time of war being targeted by foreign actors willing to hack and destroy online services (incuding banking), power stations and communications satellites, being cashless can get pretty confusing pretty quickly.

    • I am already mostly there, and if the bank wasn't on the way to the laundromat, I would be.
      Only time I use cash is to reload the card for washing clothes since they give a 10% bonus and there is an ATM on the way.
    • I hope they get there as quickly as possible. That way, the rest of the world will have a real world example of what a terrible idea it was.

      And exactly how terrible is it?

      I mean other than being more difficult to hide drug purchases and tax evasion and what not.

  • At least when I left the country - there was a ridiculous tax applied to all deposits made to accounts that had checkwriting abilities. It was a clear financial disincentive to having a checking account at all - at the time, most people had EFTPOS cards that could be used for cash at ATMs, or for cashless transactions in a large number of merchants (but not all - this was 1999 and EFTPOS fees were prohibitive for small transactions like a soda or a sandwich). Anyway, without that tax disincentive, checks pr
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      huh? most chequeing accounts had absolutely no fees, barring a few specific banks. I still had my chequebook in Australia till the mid 2000's, was never charged/taxed a cent on it. Reality is cheques sucked and needed to go, some banks brought in fees earlier than others to phase them out.
      • He can't even spell cheque correctly. My guess is he's never been to Australia.
        When I was there in the 1990's I never bothered with cash and never noticed the EFT-POS fees he's complaining about either.
        • by larwe ( 858929 )
          I was born there and lived 24 years there. Cool story, bro. This is completely irrelevant to the fact that I am an American citizen living in the USA and hence using US English as my language for writing, spellchecking, and all other purposes. And _you_ didn't pay the EFTPOS fees, the vendor did - so vendors that did mostly tiny transactions (milk bars for example) generally weren't set up for EFTPOS, and those that were didn't allow transactions under a floor price - typically around $10. It is a complete
        • He can't even spell cheque correctly.

          Check is a legitimately recognised spelling. While being predominantly American English it is starting to be seen more and more in British circles simply because Americans are about the only people still using the thing.

      • by larwe ( 858929 )
        Ah, I misremembered. It wasn't a tax on _deposits_ but on _withdrawals_. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
      • by Adrian Harvey ( 6578 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @09:33PM (#63745768)

        These weren’t bank fees, but a state-level tax. It varied by state/territory, so it’s possible you were in a state without one. I was in the ACT in the late 90’s and I remember it well. My bank set me up with a seperate cheque and ‘savings’ account and when I wanted to write a cheque I moved money across from the savings account to minimise exposure to the tax.

        I don’t know that it has a serious impact on the decline in cheque usage though - New Zealand had a similar decline, but no similar tax (there was a 5c stamp duty on each cheque at one point, but it wasn’t the pain point that the Australian definitely-not-a-tax was.)

        I’ve found the Wikipedia article on it too. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_account_debits_tax [wikipedia.org].

        • by larwe ( 858929 )
          Yeah I checked myself and it was Federal until 1990, when the Fed govt transferred authority to the states - in VIC at least, it was alive and well in my memory, dunno when they nixed it.
        • yeah I don't think this had any effect on the decline of cheques. most people didn't write that many cheques for it to be an issue and just had seperate cheque and savings accounts. These were all repealed in the early 2000's and cheque writing only declined further, especially with so many scams and cons based around cheques it just seemed a good idea to get rid of them now there were better alternatives.
          • In the 90s you think most people didnt write checks?

            How do you imagine they paid their bills?
            • By the late 90s I for one paid most bills by direct debit. All the major utilities in Australia were able to run the bank tapes needed to enable this.

              A few other recurring payments were taken care of by automatic payment (fill in a form at the bank, pay a small setup fee and the money comes out your account each fortnight or month)

              Cheques were for one-offs and irregular bills - like say from a plumber or builder.

    • They work in natural disasters and save money where businesses charge extra for credit card purchases.

      I have two cards, checking and carry about a grand in cash (its not some weird flex, no one else sees it) for cash buys of tools and equipment from private sellers.

  • These weird new types of states that are just as controlling as say Iran or Saudi Arabia in some respects, but give you many of your rights, and the ones you don't have are "for your protection" - it's just so weird and creepy and 1984esque.

    • Soooo let me get this right, people choosing not to use cash makes them a nanny state?
      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 07, 2023 @12:26AM (#63746004)

        Soooo let me get this right, people choosing not to use cash makes them a nanny state?

        You didn't get it right.
        Choosing to not use cash is just choosing to not use cash.

        The government forcing you to not use cash, for the stated purpose of looking at all of your transactions to make sure they are not for "criminal purposes", is a nanny state.

        The term "nanny" is given to a person that looks after a small child not able to take care of themselves, usually when the parents have another task to do where they can't look after the child.

        Choice isn't involved, the child has no say, just like the government forcing things on you.
        Their stated goal is to stop criminal transactions. Do you often make criminal transactions? No? Well your government doesn't believe you are capable of making that choice, which is why they are making it for you.

        That's what makes the government likened to a nanny.

      • Soooo let me get this right, people choosing not to use cash makes them a nanny state?

        No. Australia being a nanny state makes it a nanny state. You know, the kind of state that has laws on the book saying parents can be arrested if their 11 year old walks to school by themselves, and that every house regardless of who owns it or is in it needs a pool fence with a child proof gate.

    • So you want the government to force people and banks to maintain use of cash when organic use is falling because... otherwise it's a nanny state???
      • yep, basically he is the type that thinks an authoritarian government dictating to you what you can do is freedom if it matches his choices and people being allowed to make their own choice (be it good or bad) is nanny state because they didn't make the choice he wanted..
      • by larwe ( 858929 )
        The philosophy here has nothing to do with nanny states. If nothing is done to stop it, the convenience and safety of cashless operation (especially for places like 24hr liquor stores, gas stations, etc) will naturally lean both affluent customers and retailers to stop using cash. The main purpose of legislating cash to be a _required_ payment option is twofold - the primary stated reason is "so that people who exist outside the cashless economy can still buy the necessities of life" (this is the stated rea
        • once you start dictating to people what they must do you are very much heading towards not away from a Nanny state. that isn't freedom. The solution is to find a way for those areas outside the cashless society to interact with it not to dictate to the majority how they must act.
          • by larwe ( 858929 )
            The "majority"? The people who are being compelled to accept cash are retailers. Are those the "majority"? I think not. Citizens are free to use electronic payments if they wish, and they're the majority. Mandating that retailers accept cash - which is, at the end of the day, the tangible representation of the promise behind fiat currency - does not seem any more onerous than mandating that people drive on the correct side of the road for the local jurisdiction.
            • If you compel retailers to accept cash then EVERYONE has to pay for that cost which you are dictating to the majority.
  • Trend seems odd (Score:2, Insightful)

    by djtwo ( 925751 )
    50% low cash users in 2019, now 33%. An unusual kind of increase
  • I only use cash on rare occasions such as tipping hotel staff or stuff like that. Most days I have zero cash in my wallet so don’t try to rob me.

  • by JabrTheHut ( 640719 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @09:09PM (#63745698)

    Less cash benefits Banks and the larger retailers. So they are punishing customers by increasing fees for using cards. It’s gotten to the point where I am tempted to go back to cash.

    • Less cash isn't much of a benefit. No-cash is a *huge* benefit. Much harder for theft (both internal and external), no need to balance the till, no need to keep a float, no need to actually go to the bank.

      You know, you can close up shop at 5 and actually leave at 5 rather than running errands solely required because you need to have cash.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Why aren't the fees regulated? In the EU there was a crackdown on fees. Not just for banking and card transactions, but for things like international roaming costs that in reality cost the telecom companies close to nothing.

    • You do not understand what the end goal is, so you are happy with cashless transactions.

      The end goal is to analyze all of your spending habits to be able to charge you the maximum amount that you can afford.

      In other words, you are helping to create a world where price is relative to your ability to pay rather than the cost of the item/service itself.

      So you might have to pay $2,000 for a pair of socks whereas I might have to pay only $1699. It should be noted that the price to make the socks was $19. But don

  • by MavEtJu ( 241979 ) <slashdot&mavetju,org> on Sunday August 06, 2023 @09:14PM (#63745712) Homepage

    > Every year since ï1966 when the country transitioned from pounds and shillings to decimal currency, the total value and number of notes in circulation increased.

    > That all came crashing to a halt in the 2022-23 financial year, with a sharp decrease in $50 notes especially.

    So every year for 57 years it went up, and this year it went down, and that is then immediately extrapolated to "they're going cashless, mark my words!".

    • by larwe ( 858929 )
      Yeah there are a lot of ways to interpret this. For one, Covid changed the landscape for exchanging bits of paper (well, plastic in Australia since 1988 when the failed first plastic $10 note came out), and secondly maybe the reason $50s have decreased in circulation is because of inflation - small transactions for a coffee or a sandwich use $20s and below (many such stores don't even accept larger bills), and large cash transactions have been using $100s. The first time I saw a $100 note was in 1984 - also
      • by PAjamian ( 679137 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @10:30PM (#63745856)

        In NZ at least (and I would have assumed Australia to be the same) ATMs now dispense $20s and $50s, whereas they used to only dispense $20s, so I would assume that, combined with inflation, has made $50s much more common. In other words, the $50 note is the new $20 and should be much more common as a result.

        • by larwe ( 858929 )
          That makes a lot of sense. My understanding is that most ATMs have only two cassettes, so only two choices of denomination. Weirdly enough here in the US, most big nationwide banks have $20s in their ATMs (people used to refer to them as "yuppie food stamps") whereas smaller local banks tend to have $20 and $5. Some very fancy ATMs even let you pick the mix of bills in your withdrawal. Of course, in Vegas, ATMs dispense $100s :D
          • The ATMs I use in Germany, usually have 5, 10, 20 and 50 EUR notes. In the more well-off towns they have 10, 20, 50 and 100 instead.

  • by oumuamua ( 6173784 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @09:26PM (#63745736)
    You said you were working late last Friday?
    Well the card record show you bought flowers, bought earrings, then dinner at that new expensive French restaurant.
    • by Barny ( 103770 )

      If you want to hide your purchases from your bank record, buy a gift card and use that to pay.

    • Well the card record show you bought flowers

      Why would the card record show that? It's entirely optional for you to use the same cashless system as someone you're hiding something from. Get a second card and another account.

      • Why would the card record show that? It's entirely optional for you to use the same cashless system as someone you're hiding something from. Get a second card and another account.

        But cash is SO much simpler to use in this scenario....

        None of the hoops you are suggesting they'd need to jump through.

  • by eric31415927 ( 861917 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @09:27PM (#63745740)

    I imagine there will be an influx of people working for currency substitutes - not gold or silver - but beer, tobacco, and contraband. It will mostly be prepaid credit cards at the start until the feds put some sort of controls on those. If you want someone to build you a back deck with no receipts (i.e. under the table), you might have to supply him/her with something of value with which they can quietly raise rent and grocery money.

    • by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @10:44PM (#63745888)

      I imagine there will be an influx of people working for currency substitutes - not gold or silver - but beer, tobacco, and contraband. It will mostly be prepaid credit cards at the start until the feds put some sort of controls on those. If you want someone to build you a back deck with no receipts (i.e. under the table), you might have to supply him/her with something of value with which they can quietly raise rent and grocery money.

      This is the primary motivation. The under-the-table economy is huge and government would love to be able to track every dollar that ever moves from person to person. Wanna pay the neighbor kid to mow your lawn or shovel your snow? Now he needs a bank account where he can start paying fees and maybe even taxes before finishing grade school. Might as well learn early about the all seeing eye of the state.

  • by Gideon Fubar ( 833343 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @09:33PM (#63745766) Journal

    The media in Australia are owned by a very small group of vested interests who have resorted to fearbaiting the elderly to maintain a market share.

  • Whose portrait will they put on the notes and coins when they become a Republic?

    • by larwe ( 858929 )
      Dame Edna. There is no other choice. Wow, I just realized that coins in AU now will have King Charles on them.
  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @10:34PM (#63745866)

    wherein nobody will have any cash.

  • Seriously, here in Sydney the only reason people hold cash is to pay their dealer. Or so I've been told ...

    And the only time we ever see a cheque is when we get a refund from a company who hopes we won't bother to cash it in. Actually, most young Australians probably don't know what to do with a cheque.

    • by larwe ( 858929 )
      Do Australian mobile banking applications allow you to deposit a check by photo? Most if not all US bank apps let you do this - endorse the back, take a picture of both sides, they hold it for a while and then they clear it.
      • by mkwan ( 2589113 )

        Do Australian mobile banking applications allow you to deposit a check by photo?

        Probably. I don't know - I've only received a cheque once in the past 20 years.

    • I pay mine with PayPal
  • by illogicalpremise ( 1720634 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @11:29PM (#63745954)

    We'll stay a low-cash country, not no-cash. It's not just drugs (which are very popular here), pretty much any small business pays casual workers cash-in-hand. Not only would there be massive pushback from small business owners on a cash ban but it would be difficult to actually enforce. Even if you stop making new physical currency you still have to somehow collect the billions of dollars already in peoples possession.

    If you think that will be easy, think again. Banks have been closing down branches for the last 20 years so it's not like you can always just walk in somewhere with grannies big jar of pennies and expect someone to actually count it. There's not even a guarantee that everyone has a bank account (we have rural, homeless, indigenous, elderly people who have never used banks - don't trust them, don't have an address, don't have ID, no local bank, etc).

    I've only been in one business that was card-only and it was an American donut franchise - so, nothing of value lost there.

    Frankly, the death of cash has been greatly exaggerated.

  • Cashless? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by GrayOldTimer ( 10492242 ) on Sunday August 06, 2023 @11:51PM (#63745968)
    What happens when the electricity is off? In northern Australia, we occasionally cop a cyclone (hurricane, typhoon). A severe cyclone can create so much damage to the electical system, a large area can be without electicity for a week, maybe longer. ATM's, EFTPOS machines and the communication network they need don't work without electicity. If we are without cash as well, what then? Go back to bartering for supplies? I'll trade you three eggs for a litre of milk! Adds a whole new meaning to "Cashless Society". The more technology advances, the harder we crash when it doesn't work.
    • by armada ( 553343 )
      Same here in Miami. No intelligent resident of Florida that did not just move here from New York or California would ever want to loose cash. Every time a Hurricane hits we loose electricity, sometimes phones, and many other services. Imagine also loosing the ability to pay for food, fuel, medicine, transportation, etc.
  • I hate to burst the government conspiracy theories bubble, but this is completely (free) market driven. People stopped using cash in COVID. The market chose to preferentially deal with businesses that accepted cards for small payments. Now consumers find it far more convenient. The Reserve Bank (central bank) is just reacting to supply and demand. Less demand for cash so they don't replace all damaged cash. That is a free market economy. Cash is still around though for those who choose that!

    I'm sure the o

  • by NotEmmanuelGoldstein ( 6423622 ) on Monday August 07, 2023 @01:42AM (#63746064)

    ... hurt the nation's criminals ...

    They mean, prevent consumption of illicit drugs.

    The Australian government has a restricted cash policy towards known addicts. This is viewed with suspicion because street markets, some buses and most school activities are cash-only.

    I think about 10 years ago, there was an Australian article about street buskers needing to carry an EFTPoS machine to receive their gratuities.

    Shops, however, enjoy not having to carry cash, trust employees with it, then count it and bank it.

  • > meaning they claim to use cash for less than 20 per cent of all their in-person transactions.

    Ok, they have a little way to go to catch up with the likes of Norway

    > only 3 to 5% of all transactions are carried out using cash.

    https://monevium.com/blog/top-5-european-countries-with-cashless-societies/ [slashdot.org]

    and that data seems to be from 2019 (pre-pandemic). I suspect it is even less cash transations now.

  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Monday August 07, 2023 @05:21AM (#63746330)
    If your entire income only exists because some private company's payment app says it does, according to their arbitrary definitions and policies, what's to stop them from at some point just saying your money doesn't exist? Or that it's worth half of the currency value? Or that you owe them a bunch of fees they buried in the fine print?

    Say what you want about reserve currencies and inflationary politics, at least in a democracy there are mechanisms to address the problem. The same problems will recur in a thoroughly cashless system, but with total opacity and zero accountability. You can't punish them by taking out your money because there wouldn't be anything to take out.

    Legal tender is an underappreciated political concept. It stops businesses from defrauding the entire economy and robbing consumers with private Funny Money. A fully cashless system would have to do a lot of very complicated things to offer the same protection.
  • I think it was Mondex that tried a cashless system in Swindon, UK, whereby everyone had a digital card on which you could deposit cash. You could then treat it like cash, transferring to other people's cards, etc, all without any central bank involvement. A system like that could possibly be made to work today.

    However, that's not the approach being followed by most attempts at going cashless, which tie people to the grid (bitcoin) or to a bank (debit card, credit card).

  • Sweeden has been mostly cashless for a very long time. Most banks do not have nor do they accept or handle cash, most stores do no accept cash. The same trend is following in Denmark and Finland. Canada is also extremely cashless, with cash expected to make up 3% of transactions by 2025.

    TL;DR, I don't know why this story is highlighting Australia as a leader here. They are catching up.

    In my opinion, one of the fulcrums for moving all cashless is having a fictionles, fairly private, and 100% fee-free way to

    • Indeed.

      Cash here is so rare, that they made a news spot about Swedes and cash recently. They asked random strangers on the streets if they could recognize the various bills, almost no one got it right.

      Personally I've not seen cash physically for the last 10+ years. Last time I used cash was when some stranger purchased a test-instrument from me and decided to give me old cash for it. The cash was so old it was almost expired, but I could still use it in ONE store to buy a 3D printer, but technically they we

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