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The Almighty Buck EU

Cashless Adoption Growing In Europe 294

dkatana writes: Many European cities are moving toward a cashless economy. Some public services are not accepting cash anymore, such as parking meters, buses and transit, and city offices. (If you plan to visit Europe make sure your credit card has a chip, or you won't be able to use self-service machines.) Contactless cards, which allow people to pay easily for small transactions, are also gaining popularity. According to Finextra, a leading financial news service, "contactless is the new normal in Europe, with more than a billion tap-and-go purchases worth €12.6 billion on Visa cards in the last 12 months." In some places, cashless options are being pushed by mistrust of the banking system. At the same time, places like Germany are dead set on keeping cash as the preferred method of payment.
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Cashless Adoption Growing In Europe

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  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:05AM (#50128529) Homepage
    Just saying.... :D
  • Don't worry (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:07AM (#50128549)

    Cash isn't going anywhere. As soon as the lights go out or the servers are down... you can only can with cash.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Why would the lights go out or the servers go down? I would think as technology advances, these types of incidents would become fewer and farther between - eventually not happening at all.
      • Why would the lights go out or the servers go down?

        Because admins insist on doing upgrades over the weekends. Upgrades they aren't competent to do, or that they haven't properly planned for, or that they haven't allowed enough time for, or that don't work the way they should.

        It's not common, but it does happen that ATMs are down, occasionally.

      • Why would the lights go out or the servers go down? I would think as technology advances, these types of incidents would become fewer and farther between - eventually not happening at all.

        But it would cause more chaos because people are used to the technology so much that they don't know what to do when the situation occurs...

      • A few weeks ago, we had a major storm that knocked out the power for a good part of the city. Most places were closed, and one of the few that were open had a big "Cash-Only" sign on it.

    • As soon as the lights go out or the servers are down, cash will be pretty much as useless as credit cards.
      • That's my thought. Without power the point of sale system can't work. No power no sales.

        No power no gas pumps,no stores. Now servers crashing could limit transactions but the people who run those generally believe 5 9s of uptime isn't good enough.

        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          I've I'm in a restaurant, I can still hand over cash and walk out. What are you going to do with all the customers waiting to leave who don't have cash?

    • You can only what with cash? Don't leave us hanging, man!

    • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @12:15PM (#50129359)

      Cash isn't going anywhere.

      Nonsense, I hear Greece has already adopted the cashless system in full.

    • Bottle caps
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:09AM (#50128573)

    Here is a tip: if you don't trust banks, keep cash. Ask the Greeks and Cypriots why.

    • Here is a tip: if you don't trust banks, keep cash. Ask the Greeks and Cypriots why.

      Well, you can always use Bitcoin

      • by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @12:06PM (#50129277)

        If the stores you go to accept Bitcoin in the first place.

    • Yeah that statement left me scratching my head too. It was added by the editor, not the submitter, so it's probably not surprising that it was poorly phrased. If you follow the link, you find that it's about people not trusting banks, so they're using their mobile phone carrier to handle small monetary transactions.
      • Except the credit card is issued by the bank, can be revoked by the bank, is processed through the bank, and is probably linked to a bank account. I'm scared of snakes, I'm going to jump into the pit of vipers!
  • Privacy Issues (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Needs2BeSaid ( 4062029 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:11AM (#50128613) Homepage
    Governments everywhere will help facilitate a cashless society. Just think of all that purchasing data they can monitor. Not to mention, they can force people to pay local/state/federal sales tax on person-to-person sales (e.g.: Garage Sale items).

    A truly cashless society is the wet dream of the IRS, FBI, NSA ....
    • Bingo (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:19AM (#50128689)

      A cashless society is a surveillance society where every purchase you make is recorded permanently -- not only for government to use against you as they see fit, but for corporations to exploit your lack of privacy for their own profit (not yours).

    • It's not just that. In a cashless society the government van put a tax on deposits that can't be avoided by holding currency. In other words, it makes it possible to seize savings in a way that is fairly automated.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      See, with cash, all you can lose is what's in your pocket. With these cashless systems, a crook can clean out your entire bank account.

      Fraud protections? Ahahahahaa! See, while they are investigating the theft, your mortgage and other bill payments are bouncing. Now, the mortgage company and everyone else who was being paid charges you late and other fees. When you try to explain to them what happened, they just say, "Fuck you! Pay me!"

      Although, the CFPB here in the States has been a WONDERFUL agency (God

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by roman_mir ( 125474 )

      Actually a truly cashless society is the wet dream of every government and central banker since inflation is the most insidious and powerful tax that can be implemented without participation of any IRS and of any citizen whatsoever.

      You don't even have to make a tax payment to be taxed with inflation and government doesn't have to bother pretending to have some kind of fiscal policy. The only policy of a 'cashless society' is printing money and the result of that policy is destruction of that society via de

  • I wonder if this is a foreshadowing of the UK becoming the first to implement mandatory ID chip implants?
  • Seems more like mistrust of local currency because of inflation is pushing people to use US dollars. Alternately, the push for credit cards that transact in US dollars. So, pretty much they are placing all their trust in the banking system as far as I can tell.
  • by SuperBanana ( 662181 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:23AM (#50128739)

    Wire transfers are extremely common in Europe; virtually instantaneous, cheap, etc. Customers can do them themselves, person to person.

    Here in the US? Anywhere from a day to WEEKS for absolutely no legitimate reason. You generally need a teller or branch manager to do it. At least $5; $40 if the transaction ends up going through the Fed.

    It's 2015. Why does transferring money in the US take more than a minute and a few cents?

  • by petes_PoV ( 912422 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:26AM (#50128783)
    Never make the mistake of thinking of "Europe" as a single entity. It isn't.

    While it's true that in London the buses no longer take cash (you'll need an Oyster card) that's not the case everywhere - not even everywhere in England. But in many parts of most European countries (yes, Europe isn't even a single country) cash is very much king and it's wrong to assume that a credit card will be universally accepted. Many restaurants outside of cities in lots of countries won't take plastic. So it's wise to have enough cash to cover a transaction, even if you do expect to pay with a card.

    • by Sique ( 173459 )
      And even Europe is not exactly Europe. Many people are used to call the E.U. and its member states Europe, but that's not really true. About half of the territory and about a third of the inhabitants of Europe are not in the E.U..
  • by Optic7 ( 688717 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:26AM (#50128797)

    In case you didn't know, the cards that most banks are now issuing in the US are chip and signature, not chip and pin like in Europe, and I understand that there are some spots that DO NOT accept chip and signature, like unattended tolls, unattended gas stations, and possibly some unattended transportation ticket purchases (trains, etc).

    Pretty frustrating that credit card issuers decided to go this route in the US with some bullshit justification that people wouldn't know how to use the cards (WTF?).

    While the chip and signature is more resistant to skimming and duplication, it is no more secure than the old magnetic stripe cards if your physical card is stolen. I think they did this to prevent an increase in support costs instead (people requesting to reset PIN numbers, etc).

    • by xaxa ( 988988 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:34AM (#50128913)

      They did it as the credit card market is more competitive in the States. Many people have several cards, and the issuers felt that requiring people to remember a PIN would make it less likely that the shopper would choose their card.

    • Absolutely correct. Ticketing machines, such as those in European train stations at airports, also require Chip and PIN. You also can't use the Vélib (Paris) or other bike rental systems without a PIN.

      For many years, US banks thought that it was cheaper to eat their losses on fraud from unchipped cards rather than join the modern world with chip-and-pin. The Target breach seems to have changed some thinking there, but the current chip-and-signature cards only help a bit. You're able to use them in

      • by hawaiian717 ( 559933 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @04:02PM (#50131521) Homepage

        There are, at the moment, three issuers of PIN-preferred cards in the United States: United Nations Federal Credit Union, First Tech Federal Credit Union, and Harvard University Employees Federal Credit Union. The first two anyone can join by first becoming a member of a particular nonprofit association. Given a choice, I would go for First Tech (or the Harvard Alumni card if you qualify) since they offer no foreign transaction fees and support all PIN variations (where the PIN can either be verified by the card itself or over the network by the bank); UNFCU only offers no foreign transaction fees on a card with an annual fee (you'd have to decide for yourself if the annual fee is worth the other additional benefits).

        There is one other PIN-preferred option, the Diners Club MasterCards issued by BMO Harris Bank. However, they stopped taking applications several months ago and haven't resumed, so they're not an option at present if you don't already have it.

        Two other fairly large issuers, USAA and Navy Federal Credit Union, were offering PIN-preferring cards but switched to Signature preferring.

        But one question to consider is if you need a PIN-preferring card, or merely one that supports PIN? In the latter case, you'll still sign most of the time but if you encounter a situation where a PIN is required, it will work. Bank of America, Citibank, Wells Fargo, and Synchrony Bank (they issue a lot of affiliate branded cards like Walmart and Banana Republic) all fall into this category. A PIN preferring card would allow you to more easily blend in in Europe, but for now would actually be harder to use in the US; particularly in restaurants since even those that have switched to EMV card readers are still doing the thing where they take your card away from the table, so you'd end up having to go with them to wherever they have the terminal set up to enter your PIN, rather than being like Europe and Canada where the waiter has a portable credit card reader that they bring to your table.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Cash Please (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Sir_Eptishous ( 873977 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:30AM (#50128855)
    I use a cc for some purchases.
    I NEVER use a debit card...

    Since the Target debacle, and many more like it, I have transitioned back to using cash almost exclusively.
    It appears to me that a cashless system is less robust and more likely to be taken advantage of by criminals.
    So yes, cashless apologists will whine about things like bank robberies, etc, but when it comes to what is best for me, not the bank, I choose cash please.
    • by dave420 ( 699308 )
      Well, the sorry state of banking and card security in the US has more to do with that than the technology itself.
      • by tomhath ( 637240 )
        Agreed. I would prefer to have something like a gift card for small transactions - with no connection to me or my back account. Same as cash. But until then I use the credit card for big purchases and minimize the exposure by paying cash for small ones.
    • Have fun with your cash, but being pick pocketed, mugged, or robbed by police^H^H^H^H^H^H "highway men" is a way for you to lose cash without a way to remove it.

      With a credit card you are responsible for $50; however, every bank I've seen waives that and charges you nothing.

      Good call on not using your debit card. If something did happen, it's always better to have it be the bank's money locked up during an investigation on a unauthorized charge, then your money in your checking account.

      • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

        Most people have not been "pick pocketed, mugged, or robbed by police^H^H^H^H^H^H "highway men" in their entire lifetimes. While millions, like myself, have been screwed by things like the Target debacle. It was the one fucking time I'd been to Target in several years. Ditto on the debit cards...I'll never have one.

      • I live in a relatively "safe" community, and the risk of mugging is always a possibility, however rare. I'm more worried about someone wanting to steal my phone...
  • Cash is still king (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Governments worldwide, local and federal, increasingly are removing the ability to use cash. They cannot track it or you. Think that's tin foil hat thinking? Think again.

    Here is something I know for a fact is happening because I've talked to people in the industry that tracks metrics. Your bank sells information about you to bidders. Your purchase habits, how often, what, where. Guess who is curious and is a buyer? Your insurance companies, health, car, and house. You think for a second your rates are rando

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Bartering has been making a comeback lately. Including businesses trading services with each other and ditching the cash aspect of the transaction.

  • I'm a Retail Manager A Chip & Pin transaction at the till takes 30 seconds from triggering, Maybe 1/2 to 1/4 of the time for a properly checked Signature. Contactless (which is now at least 10% of my sales) takes 15 seconds. Across thousands of card transactions per day this is moving people through my tills faster meaning I have to have fewer people serving to keep customers moving at the same rate. ANY card that requires only signature that is used to pay in my store has to be verified with a teleph
  • by Noryungi ( 70322 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @11:50AM (#50129121) Homepage Journal

    Full Disclosure: yes, I live in Europe.

    The largest cashless credit card payment system in France (Moneo) was just closed down very abruptly. Seems the whole ''cashless''/''contactless'' thing was just not profitable enough -- and not adopted enough -- to be continued.

    Read all about it here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    In a place like Greece, for instance, it is well known that the vast majority of transactions are paid in cash, not using a credit card or anything.

    I would take that kind of article with a large grain of salt on the side. Seems to me some bankers are declaring victory even before the war has started...

    • by twokay ( 979515 )
      In my experience (limited mainly to Germany i confess) cash is still very common for daily transactions, far more so than the UK.

      Most staff in a European restaurant/small shop/kiosk will give you an annoyed look if you mention "credit card", and often i have had to make my way to the one till in the establishment with a card reader connected to pay without cash.

      It's pretty much the opposite in the UK. If you don't have a wireless card reader expect lost sales.
  • by Khashishi ( 775369 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @12:03PM (#50129255) Journal

    Whether cash or credit, it's all controlled by a cartel of banks.

  • Sure... governments love cashless transactions (assuming they're traceable, and most are). But the real motivator for people to switch away from paying with cash is the convenience factor.

    For example, this morning, I used a smartphone app to pay the parking meter in the garage I parked in before going in to work. It still lets you pay with coins, but that's so impractical. For starters, it costs about $8/day to park, and the meter won't even let you put that much money into it using coins, at one time. So

    • by Misagon ( 1135 )

      It sounds to me as if the parking meter was designed to make you use the credit card.

  • by koan ( 80826 )

    The more I read about Germany the more I want to move there, "convenience is the death of liberty".

    Going cashless is stupid.

  • In parallel with this trend, European countries are getting increasingly fussy about which cards they will accept. Recently, railways in The Netherlands, for example, wouldn't accept cards that had Visa or Mastercard logos - only V Pay or Maestro (European debit card variants). These latter aren't even routinely issued in the UK where most debit cards are branded Visa or Mastercard and are viewed as "credit" cards in most European countries. If you wanted to buy a railway ticket in Amsterdam station, your
    • by xaxa ( 988988 )

      However, the card will likely have limited geographical scope (eg the London Oyster Card), so if you're travelling widely you'll need a bunch of them or pay higher fares.

      London introduced the Oyster card before contactless credit/debit cards existed, and even before the standards for transport cards were completed.

      Since some time last year, contactless credit/debit/phone payments have been accepted on the London Underground, trains, buses and trams. There were suggestions in the media that Transport for London wanted to reduce Oyster card use, since it costs them more. I can believe that, with the huge number of adverts encouraging people to use contactless cards.

  • by ciaran2014 ( 3815793 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @12:33PM (#50129529) Homepage

    Cash transactions aren't linked to your name and stored in a database forever, and the cash in your pocket can't be deactivated by banks or a government.

    (Yes, some smart Alec will point out ways to track and block bank notes, but this is waaaaaaaaay more difficult and waaaaaaaaaaaay less effective than what banks and governments can do to electronic money.)

  • by Skylinux ( 942824 ) on Friday July 17, 2015 @01:02PM (#50129857) Homepage

    If you plan to visit Europe make sure your credit card has a chip, or you won't be able to use self-service machines.

    No, bring cash! We use debit cards for purchases since most people don't have or use credit cards. Especially smaller shops will refuse your business when you come in with a real credit card and only intend to purchase something below 100 Euro.

    Good luck with your Visa or Amex over here ;)

  • Cash won't disappear unless the intent is to cripple the economy. After all, it's easier to slip someone a hundred euro that trade electronic payment details. And I doubt if the EU gov't office drones will accept debit cards for bribes.

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