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Zagorsky

The Power of Cash

Why Using Paper Money Is Good for You and Society

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-1-394-29991-1
Verlag: Wiley
Erscheinungstermin: 01.04.2025
Lieferfrist: bis zu 10 Tage

Why cash is worth preserving in an increasingly “cashless” society

Over the last thirty years, we have witnessed a rapid transformation in the way that people pay for goods and services. Where we used to use cash for all but our largest purchases, many people now prefer credit cards, debit cards, cryptocurrency, and electronic services like Venmo, PayPal, or Alipay. And that's not necessarily a good thing.

In The Power of Cash: Why Using Paper Money is Good for You and Society, Professor Jay Zagorsky, former advisor to the Boston Federal Reserve, delivers a startlingly insightful and eye-opening discussion of the harmful and unintended consequences of the demise of paper money. The author convincingly argues that cash is an essential and helpful tool that's worth preserving for the long run.

You'll learn why using cash makes it easier to control your spending, secures your anonymity and privacy against bad actors intent on stealing your data, mitigates the chaos of climate change and war, and helps the poor, vulnerable, unbanked, and disenfranchised to navigate society. You'll also discover: - When business and governments can refuse to take your paper money
- How cash maintains your privacy and anonymity from tech companies, hackers, banks, and others
- How cash ensures companies cannot charge you a high “custom price”
- The potential dangers of giving governments control and knowledge of your spending
- How cash controls additional fees and costs associated with electronic purchases

Perfect for anyone with an interest in the way we pay for the things we buy each and every day, The Power of Cash is also a must-read for people interested in the implications of a truly “cashless” society on personal finance, technology, politics, and social justice.


Produkteigenschaften


  • Artikelnummer: 9781394299911
  • Medium: Buch
  • ISBN: 978-1-394-29991-1
  • Verlag: Wiley
  • Erscheinungstermin: 01.04.2025
  • Sprache(n): Englisch
  • Auflage: 1. Auflage 2025
  • Produktform: Gebunden
  • Gewicht: 590 g
  • Seiten: 384
  • Format (B x H x T): 162 x 233 x 33 mm
  • Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt
Autoren/Hrsg.

Autoren

Preface xv

Chapter One

Introduction and Overview 1

Shift Away from Cash 3

Why the Shift? 4

Key Question – Is the Shift Good? 5

The Synopsis: A Dozen Reasons Cash Is Powerful 8

Conclusion 13

Section I

Is Cash Disappearing? 15

Chapter Two

Is Cash Disappearing? The Case of Spending 17

Cash Use Around the World 19

Why Do Some Places Use Cash More Than Others? 20

Trends in Paper Money Use 22

Who Is Leading the US Shift? 23

Is Cash Still Used for Small Payments? 25

Conclusion 26

Chapter Three

Is Cash Disappearing? The Case of Savings 29

Trends in Paper Money Holdings 30

Other Countries 32

The Changing Mix 35

What It Means 35

Conclusion 37

Section ii

Cash Provides Society with Resilience 41

Chapter Four

How Do Cashless Payments Work? 43

Communication Disruptions 48

Electricity Disruptions – Understanding Power Grids 50

Number of Electricity Disruptions 52

Cash is Environmentally Friendly 54

Computer Security 54

Conclusion 57

Chapter Five

Natural Disasters Prevent Cashless Payments from Happening 59

Trend in Natural Disasters 62

Floods: An Example from China 64

Hurricanes 65

Fire and Drought 67

Volcanic Eruption 69

Solar Storms 70

Conclusion 72

Chapter Six

Paper Money Boosts National Defense 75

Modern Examples 77

Counterfeit Money – Destroying Faith in the Currency 79

Power 82

Moving Money 83

Destroying Faith 87

Are Transactions True? 88

Conclusion 91

Section iii

Cash Helps People 93

Chapter Seven

Using Cash Helps Control Spending 95

Do People Spend More? 98

Impulse Control 99

Visualization 100

Endowment Effect 101

The Budget Constraint 102

Conclusion 104

Chapter Eight

Other Reasons Why Using Cash Helps People 107

Using Cash Saves Money 108

Using Cash Keeps You Healthier 109

Cash and Math Skills 111

Tipping 112

Nickel and Dimed 114

Conclusion 116

Chapter Nine

Using Cash Keeps Your Life Private 117

How Private Is Collecting and Distributing Data? 119

Who Needs Data Privacy? 123

Privacy Within Households 123

Spousal and Partner Abuse and Infidelity 125

Privacy Between Households and Businesses 127

Households and Businesses versus the Government 129

Problems of Being Incorrectly Identified 132

Potential Solutions 133

Conclusion 134

Chapter Ten

Using Electronic Payments Boosts Prices 135

Merchant Fees 136

How Companies Price 140

Merchant Views 142

Surcharging and Steering 144

Custom Pricing 145

Examples of Custom Pricing 148

Conclusion 150

Section iv

Cash Helps the Vulnerable 151

Chapter Eleven

Eliminating Cash Hurts the Poor 153

Exclusion from Stores 154

Reduction in Charity 155

Legal and Other Solutions 157

How the Poor Subsidize the Rich 159

Unbanked and Underbanked 161

The Unbanked Pay Extra Fees 163

How Many Unbanked Are in the World? 165

Unable to Pay for a Phone 166

Conclusion 167

Chapter Twelve

Cash Helps Immigrants, Refugees, and Tourists 169

Vulnerable Tourists 172

Dynamic Currency Conversion 174

Foreign Exchange Rates and Black Markets 176

Conclusion 180

Chapter Thirteen

Cash Puts Limits on Central Banks Hurting the Elderly 181

The Power of Interest Rates 182

Negative Interest Rates 183

Paper Money Is a Brake 186

Savings Problems 187

Cash Limits the Damage of Bank Runs 188

Real Interest Rates 191

Conclusion 195

Section v

Cash Is Not Causing Crime, Terrorism, or Tax Evasion 197

Chapter Fourteen

Does Cash Make More People and Businesses Victims of Crime? 199

Fraud, Scams, and Identity Theft 201

The Amount of Stolen Cash 203

Cashless Ways to Commit Crimes 204

Credit Card Crime 206

Debit Card Crime 208

Does the Cashless Society Reduce Bank Losses? 209

The Case of Sweden 212

Conclusion: How to Avoid These Types of Crime? 212

Chapter Fifteen

Does Cash Facilitate Corruption, Terrorism, or Organized Crime? 215

Corruption 216

Corruption Data 219

The Case of Sweden 222

Terrorism 222

Organized Crime 227

Conclusion 228

Chapter Sixteen

Does Eliminating Cash Reduce Tax Evasion? 231

India’s 2016 Elimination of Most Cash 233

The Tax Gap Around the World 235

US Tax Gap 237

Electronic Tax Filing 239

Inflation Tax 240

Can Tax Evasion Be Reduced Without Getting Rid of Paper Money? 242

Conclusion 243

Section vi

Control 245

Chapter Seventeen

Cash Prevents Government Control 247

Shutting Off Bank Accounts 248

Digital Currency 250

Government Control of the Unbanked 252

Currency Transaction Reports 255

Conclusion 256

Chapter Eighteen

Can Businesses and Governments Refuse to Take Cash? 259

Are There Laws Forcing Businesses to Take Cash? 261

Trying to Pay the IRS with Cash 263

Why Does the IRS Not Want Cash? 267

Conclusion 268

Chapter Nineteen

Who Is Pushing the World to Go Cashless? 269

Credit and Debit Card Company Incentives 270

Credit and Debit Card Company Growth 273

Smaller Credit Card Companies 275

Banks’ Incentives 276

Government’s Incentive 278

High Technology’s Incentive 280

Retailers’ Incentive 282

Financial Technology Incentives 283

Conclusion 284

Chapter Twenty

Conclusion: What to Do to Ensure Cash Does Not Disappear 287

Individual Actions 288

Collective Advocacy 289

Bureaucratic Fixes – ATMs 290

Inflation Adjustment for Currency Transaction Reports 292

Bring Back Large Bills 293

Legislation Designed to Ensure Stores Take Cash 296

Sin Purchases 298

Other Sin or Vice Purchases 299

Year-End Bonuses 301

Military Pay 302

Mandatory Preparedness for Financial Companies 303

The End 304

Acknowledgments 307

Notes 311

Bibliography 329

Index 351