November 25, 2015

social europe journal
Why the Move towards a Cashless Society Is Bad News for Criminals

Last week I left home without my wallet. I soon realized it did not really matter. I could even manage without a plastic card. My phone can summon and pay for a taxi, buy a cup of coffee and purchase a train ticket. This year the proportion of transactions in Britainmade in cash is likely to fall below 50 per cent. Since cash is mainly used for low-value transactions, cards and electronic payment account for most of the value of payments.

Andrew Haldane , chief economist at the Bank of England, speculated last week about a cashless future. And yet cash in circulation has generally been increasing more rapidly than national income. The total volume of notes in issue is equivalent to £1,000 for every man, woman and child  in Britain. The US figure is more than $2,000. And the quantity of euros in issue has expanded threefold since the single currency was established.

Where has all this money gone? Not into your wallet or mine. Even in Germany or Austria, where consumers are reluctant to use anything but cash, the average amount people have about their person is little more than €100. Some of that is transferred during the course of the day to the cash registers of shops, which generally bank it at the end of the day. But cash in bank vaults is only about 10 per cent of the total.

The pollsters who failed to persuade the voters of Britain to reveal how they would cast their ballots in May’s general election are not very likely to have secured honest and reliable responses to the question: “How much money do you have under your mattress?”. They acknowledge that their figures are likely to underestimate the true value, but the Bank of England  speculates that 10 per cent of notes in issue are hoarded.

One-third of the value of euros in circulation is made up of €500 notes. But most Europeans report that they have never seen one with such a high denomination, and there are few retailers that are willing to accept them. These notes are useful for hoarders. But, like the SFr1,000 note, such a denomination is also useful for people who wish to make large transactions outside the banking system. The US Treasury and Bank of England have been unwilling to issue similar high denomination notes.

It seems likely that illegal activity accounts for a high proportion of the currency in circulation; that many of the dollars in use are outside the US; and that the creation of the euro provided an alternative to the dollar as a widely available medium of illicit exchange and store of criminally acquired value.

Click on Link:
http://www.socialeurope.eu/2015/09/why-the-move-towards-a-cashless-society-is-bad-news-for-criminals/

 

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