ECB Blog: In recent years, the digital revolution has led people to significantly change their payment habits – tapping a card, swiping a phone, or using a smartwatch to pay is becoming increasingly common.
Since the times of
ancient Greece money has been virtually synonymous with cash: coins and
later banknotes have provided people with an efficient and widely
accepted means of payment for their everyday transactions.
In
recent years, however, the digital revolution has led people to
significantly change their payment habits – tapping a card, swiping a
phone, or using a smartwatch to pay is becoming increasingly common.
A
new study on the payment attitudes of consumers in the euro area
(SPACE) conducted by the European Central Bank and national central
banks reveals that almost half of euro area adults now prefer to pay
digitally, and this trend appears to have accelerated further during the
coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. While cash is still the most
frequently used means of payment for in-person transactions, its share
is decreasing. For remote purchases, cards and e-payments are the
solutions of choice. And direct debits or credit transfers are the most
common way of paying bills.
This contrasting evidence suggests
that none of the means of payment currently available meets all consumer
needs. This underlines the importance of continuing to give people a
choice in how they pay, without compromising their expectations of fast,
secure, low-cost and easy-to-use payments. Indeed, cash and digital
money can be seen as mutually complementary: their coexistence offers
greater choice and easier access to simple ways of paying for all groups
in society, ensuring a high degree of inclusion and resilience in
payments.
Digital money goes hand-in-hand with the digitalisation
of the economy: it supports the growth of e-commerce and connected
lifestyles, and satisfies people’s demand for immediacy and seamless
integration between payments and digital services.
But even if
digital payments are designed to be as robust as possible, they remain
vulnerable to disruptions, such as power blackouts, cyber threats and
technical failures. In such situations, cash can support resilience in
payments: owing to its unique features, it provides a crucial backstop
and a trusted store of value. Our payment survey shows that 34% of euro
area citizens keep extra cash reserves at home for precautionary
reasons.
Cash is also inclusive. A particular concern with
digital payments is that, if they become the norm, citizens who are
unable or unwilling – for example for privacy reasons – to use such
services risk being excluded from the economy. Our payment survey
reveals that cash is regularly used by citizens of all ages, all
educational levels and all income groups. Moreover, cash is essential to
ensure the inclusion of socially vulnerable citizens who may not have
bank accounts or who lack the necessary digital skills. This highlights
the need to maintain the smooth functioning of the cash cycle, including
easy access to cash and wide acceptance of cash at points of sale. We
therefore remain firmly committed to ensuring that cash remains widely
available and accepted across the euro area.
At the same time, as
consumers and private money go digital, sovereign money also needs to
be reinvented so that the public good it provides remains fully
available in the digital era. We therefore need to be ready to issue a
digital equivalent to banknotes, should the need arise. A digital euro
would complement cash: together they would offer access to simple,
costless ways of paying. A digital euro would also be designed to be
interoperable with private payment solutions, facilitating the provision
of pan-European solutions and additional services to consumers. And the
protection of privacy will be a key priority, so that the digital euro
can help maintain trust in payments in the digital age. To further
understand end users’ needs and concerns, we are inviting feedback from
everyone as part of our ongoing public consultation on a digital euro.
Digitalisation
has the potential to revolutionise payments. However, it is important
that European households and businesses still have a choice. We are
therefore working to ensure that a public, simple, costless and safe
option remains available in all circumstances.
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