Treasury confirms cheques will stay in circulation until 2029 but then cease to be accepted as legal tender

  • NathA
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    1 hour ago

    Has anyone actually written out a cheque in their personal banking chequebook this century? I only did it occasionally in ye olden days, and mostly to post payments to utilities and pay rent etc. I don’t think I ever stood in a store and wrote out a cheque. Hardly any would accept them without a prior arrangement.

    I’ve used bank cheques this century, but not lately. Who’s out there writing cheques?

    • NathA
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      1 hour ago

      There are a few retailers these days who don’t deal with cash. It’s just as weird to me as the retailers who only deal with cash.

  • PeelerSheila
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    2 hours ago

    Consumers have a right to options. Our internet/pos has been a bit temperamental these last couple of weeks (they’re still trying to figure out why) but thankfully we take cash so the cogs keep turning, we keep selling product and making orders and we all still get paid.

  • 𝚝𝚛𝚔
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    5 hours ago

    Cash is so gross though. All those grubby mitts all over it, plus being stored in super icky places like bras and grunderpants. Big fan of cashless if for no other reason than keeping bits of other people off me.

    Actual other reasons:

    • More secure to use a locked device for payment than carry cash that becomes anonymous once its removed from your person
    • You cant lose digital money down the back of the couch, or drop it when getting your wallet out or whatever
    • Easier for businesses to keep a track and balance sales automatically when its all digital
    • Safer for staff rather than handling wads of cash, especially in places like service stations
    • Harder for dodgy folk to do dodgy deals with
    • Railison
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      1 hour ago

      Agree with the bit about it being easier to keep track of payments with electronic payment.

      Cash does have a cost, though it’s less visible.

    • guillem
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      4 hours ago

      I don’t disagree with cashless being the preferred method, but cash should always be an option because e.g. in case of disaster, the infrastructure that cashless depends on can be impaired for a while.

      • 𝚝𝚛𝚔
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        4 hours ago

        As proved by various outages, when electricity (or the internet, or the service provider, etc) is down and prevents digital transfers being made… cash doesnt work either, cause it’s all the same POS / accounting software that handles cash which is also down.

        Also if a natural disaster takes out internet access for an extended period, wheres the cash a business needs to keep on hand going to suddenly appear from? I haven’t worked in retail in a decade or more, but we always kept as little cash as possible on hand due to the constant threat of robbery. Even back then cash was way less than 50% of transactions, I’d be surprised if it was even in the double digit percentages anymore.

        • guillem
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          4 hours ago

          If you have pen and paper and the key to the drawer you don’t need a working POS on the spot to accept cash while comms are out and record the transactions later.

          And exactly: where does the cash appear from? That’s the “should always be an option” part.

          Of course there’s drawbacks for everything: less secure for staff if you accept cash vs inability to do anything when comms fail if you don’t.

          There might be a further point, although I haven’t looked into the reasons: Sweden started the cashless experiment before and they are backpedaling now.

    • Seagoon_
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      4 hours ago

      and when the electricity is down you can shop at all