Should We Get Rid of Cash?

Read the original article from Kite & Key Media here: https://www.kiteandkeymedia.com/videos/cashless-society-pros-and-cons-digital-alternatives-to-cash/

A couple of years ago, when Aretha Franklin died, journalists noticed something odd about her financial history.

Despite being one of the most successful recording artists of all time and having a net worth estimated at $60 million, the Queen of Soul had an unusual habit: she refused to perform unless she was paid in cash.i

Now, we don't recommend that approach, especially if you're making that kind of money. It's an almost foolproof way to get a call from the IRS—which Aretha Franklin did. 

But her reasons for doing it weren't crazy. As a struggling young singer, she had seen many other black artists get cheated out of the money they were owed. The lesson she took from that? That you can only be confident you’re getting what you’ve been promised when you actually have the money in your hands.

Today, however, almost no one lives that way. With debit and credit cards, Apple Pay, Venmo, PayPal, and tons of other options, Americans are using less cash than ever before. By 2017, only 30 percent of consumer transactions in the U.S. were done with actual currency.  ii And that number is only going down.

Now, there's an obvious reason for this, which is that it's super convenient to use a card or your phone instead of carrying around actual money.

Well...it's convenient for the most part.

But this brings up an obvious question: do we even need cash anymore? That might sound far-fetched, but it's a question the experts are really asking.

In 2016, Larry Summers, the former head of President Obama's National Economic Council, called for getting rid of anything larger than a $50 bill.iii

By 2020, Gary Cohn, the former head of the National Economic Council under President Trump, was suggesting we might just be better off getting rid of cash altogether.iv

Here's how that argument goes. First of all, handling cash is more costly than digital transactions. It's estimated that producing, distributing, and storing physical money costs the equivalent of about half a percent of GDP in wealthy countries.  v In the U.S., that's over $100 billion.

And cash is the favored tool of criminals, drug dealers, and terrorists…but also grandmas, which seems like it ought to count for something?

Now, before we rush headlong into a cashless society, we’ve got to think about the potential drawbacks too. For instance, at a time when everyone is concerned about the privacy of their data, what happens in a world where every single transaction in your life—everything you buy, every donation you make, every gift you give a friend or family member—is kept in a form that could be targeted by hackers...or even potentially monitored by corporations or the government?

There's also the problem of: what do you do in the case of an emergency? If all currency is digital, then no power equals no money. What happens in the case of a natural disaster that knocks out power or a problem with the electrical grid? Those are precisely the kinds of emergencies where access to cash matters most. 

And then there's the fact that some of the alternatives to cash are...just creepy. Sweden has gone digital faster than any country in the world—85 percent of transactions there don't involve any actual money changing hands.vi

One of their alternatives: according to The New York Times, over 4,000 Swedes have actually had microchip payment devices implanted in their hands.  vii

Which is fine, I guess, if you want to be able to be tracked down in the same fashion as a lost chihuahua.

But while all those drawbacks are potential bugs, the one you most need to be aware of is, for some people at least, a feature: a world without cash is a world where you can be forced to spend your money rather than save it.

Now, they don’t say it that way, of course. That’s the beautiful thing about economics: you can be totally honest about what you’re doing and people will  still have no idea what you’re talking about.

Let me explain: when you put money in a savings account, banks usually pay you interest, because having that money on hand helps them make loans. These days, however, interest rates are at rock bottom. You get almost nothing.

The next step the government could take would be negative interest rates, which means everything is upside down. If your money is in an account that would normally pay interest, the banks would now charge you to keep your money there instead. Your balance would actually be shrinking.

Now that's obviously a pretty bad deal, so banks usually won't do it. Otherwise, you'll just get frustrated and pull your money out. But the second cash goes away? So does that option.

And that's why some policymakers like this idea. Because in this scenario the only alternative to watching the money in your account slowly decrease is to just go spend it.

So politicians get to say that spending is boosting the economy...even while your savings account is wasting away.

And this isn't some conspiracy theory: an analysis by the International Monetary Fund—basically the UN of money—says this pretty much outright.viii

Yes, that's right: some of the smartest people in the world and they couldn't come up with a plan any more sophisticated than breaking your piggy bank.

Look, the point here isn't to scare you into hoarding precious metals.  Many of these digital payment tools are great and they make life way more convenient. And there's no reason we can't keep using them! But keeping cash as an option is probably worthwhile if for no other reason that it ensures you can keep the money you've worked so hard to save.

Remember, when in doubt: be more like Aretha. But, you know...pay your taxes.