Now I have read people touting how great digital is, speed, convenience, and sense of freedom, without considering any pitfalls, and putting down the very real benefits of cash too.
Now I have personally made the choice to remain with cash, partly through being an older git, but also through dogma, and dare I say it, I believe it can also keep someone in job. But the main reason i have refused to go digital is the psychological aspects of spending on the digital system, which is very similar to the behaviour of people using a credit cards. Namely it APPEARS to be painless to buy with a credit card or digital system. The emotional disconnect between the shopper, cash, the retailer, and what I would call the "VISUAL BRAKE",causes people to overspend. After all, anything that takes your eye off the account/cash is good for the retailer and bad for YOUR pocket, and that's why we are encouraged to track our spending.
In April and May, food, beverage and merchandise sales at the Eagles' stadium in the northeastern city of Sendai jumped 20% from the same two-month period of 2018, in part because taking cash out of the equation changed spending habits.
Experts say that when queues move faster, more people join. Customers don't see cash leaving their wallets and focus on the satisfaction of a purchase, so they spend more.
In fact it appears to be one reason why the JP gov is encouraging this kind of payment system further to increase consumption and with the new sales tax coming that will be an even bigger windfall.
1or2% of an increase in sales is certainly worth billions of yen to Japans exchequer.
I still personally like cash, and I like to slot 500,100 yens into a tins, and crack them open for something, and see the look on my wife eyes when its counted. In fact she's started it herself. I also think its a great way to teach the kids about money.It's a tangible commodity, and not some digital thing on the cloud out of sight!
Do you prefer cash or cashless? Is it something we should be teaching the younger generation about?
https://japantoday.com/category/busines ... -purchases