The challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies?

The euro's introduction highlights several shortcomings of cash and coins, and some advantages of paying with plastic, but is hard currency an endangered species, threatened by technologically more advanced means of payments, electronic transfers, e–money and the like? If the last twenty years...

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Main Authors: Mathias Drehmann, Charles Goodhart, Malte Krueger
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10.1111/1468-0327.00087
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description The euro's introduction highlights several shortcomings of cash and coins, and some advantages of paying with plastic, but is hard currency an endangered species, threatened by technologically more advanced means of payments, electronic transfers, e–money and the like? If the last twenty years are any guide, the answer is no. We find that modern payment technologies have little impact on currency usage. To understand this lack of effect, we distinguish between demands for large– and small–denomination banknotes. Competition from existing electronic retail payments’ products focuses mostly on small to medium–sized purchases where small bills (less than the £50) are most common. By contrast, there are few signs, nor much likelihood, of past or current electronic products displacing holdings of large bills without government intervention. Large bills, which account for over half the stock of outstanding currency in many OECD nations, are mainly held for hoarding and bad behaviour motives ranging from hard crime to paying the plumber under the table; for such purposes the anonymity of cash is, and is likely to remain, superior. As concerns policy implications, we note that, although issuing large denomination bills facilitates ‘bad behaviour’, withdrawing big bills is unlikely for political reasons. Governments could try to induce e–money usage as a means of discouraging bad behaviour, but we argue that any attempt to force a complete shift to electronic transfer, and to try to ban, or to prevent, the domestic use of cash would be appallingly illiberal.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Mathias Drehmann
Charles Goodhart
Malte Krueger
spellingShingle Mathias Drehmann
Charles Goodhart
Malte Krueger
The challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies?
author_facet Mathias Drehmann
Charles Goodhart
Malte Krueger
author_sort Mathias Drehmann
title The challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies?
title_short The challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies?
title_full The challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies?
title_fullStr The challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies?
title_full_unstemmed The challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies?
title_sort challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies?
url http://hdl.handle.net/10.1111/1468-0327.00087
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:oup:ecpoli:v:17:y:2002:i:34:p:193-228. 2024-04-14T08:13:57+00:00 The challenges facing currency usage: will the traditional transaction medium be able to resist competition from the new technologies? ‘Statement before the subcommittee on general oversight and investigations of the committee on banking and financial services’ ‘The issuance of Series–1996$100 Federal Reserve notes: Goals, strategy, and likely results’ ‘Plastic card fraud’ ‘Changes in the use of transaction accounts and cash from 1984 to 1986’ ‘The use of cash and transaction accounts by American families’ Federal Reserve Bulletin ‘Nonstationary panels, cointegration in panels and dynamic Panels: A survey’ Annual report 1999 Weekly Financial Statistics ‘Security of electronic money’ ‘Implications for central banks of the development of electronic money’ ‘Payment systems in the group of ten countries: Figures for 1995’ ‘Payment systems in the group of ten countries: Figures for 1997’ ‘Payment systems in the group of ten countries: Figures for 1998’ ‘Payment systems in the group of ten countries: Figures for 1999’ Polizeiliche Kriminalstatistik ‘The potential of server–based Internet payment systems: An attempt to assess the future of Internet payments’ Currency Use and Payments Patterns ‘Electronic money, currency demand and seignorage loss in the G10 countries’ ‘Payment technologies, financial innovation, and laissez–faire banking’ ‘The monetary dynamics of hyperinflation’ ‘The demand for currency relative to the total money supply’ Journal of Political Economy ‘Surveys on electronic money’ ‘Resisting electronic payment systems: Burning down the house’ Transaktionsudviklingen ‘A new day dawns for the electronic purse’ CardTechnology ‘Costs and benefits of a cashless society: The case of Iceland’ Geschäftsbericht der Deutschen Bundesbank 1999 ‘Monetary policy in the 21st century: An impossible task?’ Cato Journal ‘Digging into the underground economy’ ‘Here dollars, dollars … – Estimating currency demand and worldwide currency substitution’ ‘Der eurocheque ist tot – es lebe die eurocheque–Karte’ ‘The effects of technology on the EU banking systems’ ‘Payment systems in the European Union: Addendum incorporating 1997 figures’ ‘Issues arising from the emergence of electronic money’ ECB Monthly Bulletin ‘Blue Book: Payment and Securites settlement systems in the European Union’ ‘Electronic money and monetary policy: Separating fact from fiction’ ‘Payment systems in the European Union: Addendum incorporating 1995 figures’ Electronic money: Commission proposes clear regulatory framework ‘The Federal Reserve System in the payments mechanism’ It all adds up – an activity based cost study of retail payments ‘Electronic payment systems in European countries. 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An investigation into the determinants of the exchange rate’ ‘The euro in the electronic purse: Interoperability issues of smartcard based e–payments in Europe’ ‘Substitution of noncash payment instruments for cash in Europe’ ‘The case of the missing currency’ ‘A simple estimation of cointegrating vectors in higher order integrated systems’ ‘The underground economy in the United States: Annual estimates, 1930–80’ ‘United Nations surveys on crime trends and the operations of criminal justice systems III–VI’ ‘Crime and arrest data’ ‘The use and counterfeiting of United States currency abroad’ ‘Electronic money and the network externalities theory: Lessons for real life’ ‘On the concept and measurement of currency hoarding’ ‘Electronic purses: (Which) way to go?’ ‘The price of cash – on a report for a Dutch retail association’ ‘NYC smart card trial: A research note’ ‘Making electronic money legal tender: pros and cons’ ‘Who needs high denomination banknotes? A note on the proposed denominational structure of the Euro’ ‘Code breaker cracks smart cards’ digital safe’ ‘A consistent model selection’ World Development Indicators Mathias Drehmann Charles Goodhart Malte Krueger http://hdl.handle.net/10.1111/1468-0327.00087 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/10.1111/1468-0327.00087 article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:38:24Z The euro's introduction highlights several shortcomings of cash and coins, and some advantages of paying with plastic, but is hard currency an endangered species, threatened by technologically more advanced means of payments, electronic transfers, e–money and the like? If the last twenty years are any guide, the answer is no. We find that modern payment technologies have little impact on currency usage. To understand this lack of effect, we distinguish between demands for large– and small–denomination banknotes. Competition from existing electronic retail payments’ products focuses mostly on small to medium–sized purchases where small bills (less than the £50) are most common. By contrast, there are few signs, nor much likelihood, of past or current electronic products displacing holdings of large bills without government intervention. Large bills, which account for over half the stock of outstanding currency in many OECD nations, are mainly held for hoarding and bad behaviour motives ranging from hard crime to paying the plumber under the table; for such purposes the anonymity of cash is, and is likely to remain, superior. As concerns policy implications, we note that, although issuing large denomination bills facilitates ‘bad behaviour’, withdrawing big bills is unlikely for political reasons. Governments could try to induce e–money usage as a means of discouraging bad behaviour, but we argue that any attempt to force a complete shift to electronic transfer, and to try to ban, or to prevent, the domestic use of cash would be appallingly illiberal. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Breaker ENVELOPE(-67.257,-67.257,-67.874,-67.874) Stripe ENVELOPE(9.914,9.914,63.019,63.019)