Workingman wrote:Cashless is on the way, but probably not in many of our lifetimes. It is called "progess".
I was reading some time ago that nearly eight million of us, for various reasons, rely on cash on a daily basis with some 1.7 million of us without bank accounts. That last number looks set to rise, especially for the poor and those in poorer areas. Why that is the case is a bit of a mystery.
One proposal I have seen is for the government to set up a national bank of last resort (BOLR) similar to the old GIRO system or the original TSB so that nobody can ever be completely locked out.
A much bigger immediate problem, as far as I am concerned, is with everything moving to phone apps. I will never use them for things like banking, insurance, shopping or NHS or council services where I have to divulge so much sensitive personal information.
The announcement of the closure of virtually all the railway ticket offices in England is a big step down the road to a cashless society. The accent is going to be on buying "smart tickets" online and / or holding them in an app in your mobile phone. Not all existing TVMs (ticket vending machines at stations) accept cash for payment, and ultimately the TVMs are slated to be phased out anyway (as they have virtually done in Sweden).
The railways - a form of so-called
public transport, but for how much longer - will become inaccessible to the elderly and the disabled (who can't cope with the technology aspects) and the poor and those in poor areas who do not have access to a bank account or a mobile phone.
This is not progress, it is disenfanchisement.