In Sweden, a Cash-Free Future Nears-Where Even Banks Don’t Accept Cash Anymore
In Sweden, a Cash-Free Future Nears
By LIZ ALDERMANDEC. 26, 2015
STOCKHOLM — Parishioners text tithes to their churches.
Homeless street vendors carry mobile credit-card readers. Even the Abba Museum,
despite being a shrine to the 1970s pop group that wrote “Money, Money, Money,”
considers cash so last-century that it does not accept bills and coins.
Few places are tilting toward a cashless future as quickly
as Sweden, which has become hooked on the convenience of paying by app and
plastic.
This tech-forward country, home to the music streaming
service Spotify and the maker of the Candy Crush mobile games, has been lured
by the innovations that make digital payments easier. It is also a practical
matter, as many of the country’s banks no longer accept or dispense cash.
At the Abba Museum, “we don’t want to be behind the times
by taking cash while cash is dying out,” said Bjorn Ulvaeus, a former Abba
member who has leveraged the band’s legacy into a sprawling business empire,
including the museum.
Not everyone is cheering. Sweden’s embrace of electronic
payments has alarmed consumer organizations and critics who warn of a rising
threat to privacy and increased vulnerability to sophisticated Internet crimes.
Last year, the number of electronic fraud cases surged to 140,000, more than
double the amount a decade ago, according to Sweden’s Ministry of Justice.
Older adults and refugees in Sweden who use cash may be
marginalized, critics say. And young people who use apps to pay for everything
or take out loans via their mobile phones risk falling into debt.
“It might be trendy,” said Bjorn Eriksson, a former
director of the Swedish police force and former president of Interpol. “But
there are all sorts of risks when a society starts to go cashless.”
But advocates like Mr. Ulvaeus cite personal safety as a
reason that countries should go cash-free. He switched to using only card and
electronic payments after his son’s Stockholm apartment was burglarized twice
several years ago.
“There was such a feeling of insecurity,” said Mr.
Ulvaeus, who carries no cash at all. “It made me think: What would happen if
this was a cashless society, and the robbers couldn’t sell what they stole?”
Bills and coins now represent just 2 percent of Sweden’s
economy, compared with 7.7 percent in the United States and 10 percent in the
euro area. This year, only about 20 percent of all consumer payments in Sweden
have been made in cash, compared with an average of 75 percent in the rest of
the world, according to Euromonitor International.
Cards are still king in Sweden — with nearly 2.4 billion
credit and debit transactions in 2013, compared with 213 million 15 years
earlier. But even plastic is facing competition, as a rising number of Swedes
use apps for everyday commerce.
At more than half of the branches of the country’s
biggest banks, including SEB, Swedbank, Nordea Bank and others, no cash is kept
on hand, nor are cash deposits accepted. They say they are saving a significant
amount on security by removing the incentive for bank robberies.
Last year, Swedish bank vaults held around 3.6 billion
kronor in notes and coins, down from 8.7 billion in 2010, according to the Bank
for International Settlements. Cash machines, which are controlled by a Swedish
bank consortium, are being dismantled by the hundreds, especially in rural
areas.
Mr. Eriksson, who now heads the Association of Swedish
Private Security Companies, a lobbying group for firms providing security for
cash transfers, accuses banks and credit card companies of trying to “price
cash out of the market” to make way for cards and electronic payments, which
generate fee income.
“I don’t think that’s something they should decide on
their own,” he said. “Should they really be able to use their market force to
turn Sweden into a cashless society?”
The government has not sought to stem the cashless tide.
If anything, it has benefited from more efficient tax collection, because
electronic transactions leave a trail; in countries like Greece and Italy,
where cash is still heavily used, tax evasion remains a big problem.
Leif Trogen, an official at the Swedish Bankers’
Association, acknowledged that banks were earning substantial fee income from
the cashless revolution. But because it costs money for banks and businesses to
conduct commerce in cash, reducing its use makes financial sense, Mr. Trogen
said.
Cash is certainly not dead. The Swedish central bank, the
Riksbank, predicts it will decline fast but still be circulating in 20 years.
Recently, the Riksbank issued newly redesigned coins and notes.
But for an increasing number of consumers, cash is no longer
a habit.
Doing away with cash, “might be trendy,” said Bjorn
Eriksson, a former director of the Swedish police force and former president of
Interpol. “But there are all sorts of risks when a society starts to go
cashless.”
At the University of Gothenburg, students said they
almost exclusively used cards and electronic payments. “No one uses cash,” said
Hannah Ek, 23. “I think our generation can live without it.”
The downside, she conceded, was that it was easy to spend
without thinking. “I do spend more,” Ms. Ek said. “But if I had a 500 krona
bill, I’d think twice about spending it all.” (Five hundred kronor is about
$58.)
The shift has rippled through even the most unlikely
corners of the Swedish economy.
Stefan Wikberg, 65, was homeless for four years after
losing his job as an I.T. technician. He has a place to live now and sells
magazines for Situation Stockholm, a charitable organization, and began using a
mobile card reader to take payments, after noticing that almost no one carried
cash.
“Now people can’t get away,” said Mr. Wikberg, who
carries a sign saying he accepts Visa, MasterCard and American Express. “When
they say, ‘I don’t have change,’ I tell them they can pay with card or even by
SMS,” he said, referring to text messages. His sales have grown by 30 percent
since he adopted the card reader two years ago.
At the Filadelfia Stockholm church, so few of the 1,000
parishioners now carry cash that the church had to adapt, said Soren Eskilsson,
the executive pastor.
During a recent Sunday service, the church’s bank account
number was projected onto a large screen. Worshipers pulled out cellphones and
tithed through an app called Swish, a payment system set up by Sweden’s biggest
banks that is fast becoming a rival to cards.
Other congregants lined up at a special “Kollektomat”
card machine, where they could transfer funds to various church operations.
Last year, out of 20 million kronor in tithes collected, more than 85 percent
came in by card or digital payment.
“People give more money to the church now because it’s
electronic and easy,” said Mr. Eskilsson, adding that the church saved on
security costs by handling less cash.
Despite the convenience, even some who stand to gain from
a cashless society see drawbacks.
“Sweden has always been at the forefront of technology,
so it’s easy to embrace this,” said Jacob de Geer, a founder of iZettle, which
makes a mobile-powered card reader.
“But Big Brother can watch exactly what you’re doing if
you purchase things only electronically,” he said.
But for Mr. Ulvaeus, the music magnate, such concerns are
overblown.
“Everything speaks in favor of a cashless society,” he
said as he strolled past the Abba Museum to retrieve his car. “It’s a utopian
thought, but we’re very close to it.”
He paused at a hot-dog stand for a snack. But when he was
ready to pay, the card reader was broken.
“Sorry,” the vendor said. “You’ll have to use cash.”
Christina Anderson contributed reporting.
A version of this article appears in print on December
27, 2015, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Where Even
Banks Don’t Accept Cash Anymore .
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