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- <text id=94TT0597>
- <title>
- May 09, 1994: Economy:No Checks No Cash No Fuss?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 09, 1994 Nelson Mandela
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ECONOMY, Page 60
- No Checks. No Cash. No Fuss?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Despite glitches and issues of privacy, more Americans are turning
- to cards and computers to pay their bills
- </p>
- <p>By Thomas McCarroll
- </p>
- <p> Leigh Anderson is getting rid of her cash. She uses a bank-issued
- debit card to buy everything from groceries and gasoline to
- stamps at the post office. "I used to keep spare change for
- coffee, but the 7-Eleven just started accepting the card," says
- the 33-year-old education consultant. She shuns checks too,
- having signed up for a new computer service called ScanFone
- that lets her pay her credit-card, utility and 17 other bills
- in just 10 minutes by tapping a few numbers on the keypad of
- a high-tech telephone that sends instructions to the company's
- central computer. "I guess you don't have to see your money
- to have it or spend it," she says. "It's a little weird, but
- dollars aren't clean anyway."
- </p>
- <p> Ever since 1888, when philosopher Edward Bellamy foresaw a utopian
- world where money would be replaced by a card based on the "credit"
- built up by workers with their labor, financial prognosticators
- have hailed the coming of the cashless society. Club Med founder
- Gilbert Trigano tried to create some cashless utopias of his
- own by asking his guests to pay for things with beads as part
- of their tropical vacations. But in everyday life, consumers
- until now have largely chosen to hold on to their coin purses,
- dollar bills and checkbooks, reflecting an atavistic, under-the-mattress
- reluctance to part with their purchasing power.
- </p>
- <p> These days it looks as though more Americans than ever are willing
- to let go. They are traveling through coinless tollbooths, banking
- at branchless banks, riding in tokenless subways and paying
- for everything from taxi rides to mortgages with the swipe of
- a card or the blip of an electronic transfer. Such transactions
- accounted for 18% of the $55 trillion total that consumers,
- corporations and governments spent last year. But the number
- of electronic transfers has increased nearly 200% since 1986,
- in contrast to a 17% rise in the number of check and cash transactions.
- And the volume of household bills paid through automated systems
- such as ScanFone and Checkfree Corp. has doubled since 1991,
- to 800 million last year; 20% of utility bills, 16% of auto
- loans and 17% of mortgage installments are now paid electronically.
- </p>
- <p> Retailers of all kinds are going the cashless way. Supermarkets
- such as Safeway and Giant, fast-food restaurants such as Wendy's
- and Burger King, newspaper stands in Philadelphia's CoreStates
- Bank Plaza and even some taxis in Manhattan are now accepting
- credit cards. The New York City transit authority has joined
- the Washington Metro and the Bay Area Rapid Transit line in
- installing a fare-card system, which has contributed to a 40%
- drop in fare beating this year and could soon be used to introduce
- different price levels that reward frequent riders. Some states,
- among them Maryland, are replacing food stamps and welfare checks
- with bank cards that give welfare recipients access to prearranged
- monthly sums. At the New York City synagogue Ohab Zedek, members
- can have their monthly donations electronically deducted directly
- from their bank accounts. "This makes giving more painless,"
- says Sol Zalcgendler, the congregation's executive director.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, fewer checks are in the mail. More than a third of
- all U.S. workers have their paychecks directly deposited into
- their bank accounts, compared with 8% in 1988. Almost half of
- the Federal Government's annual budget is transferred electronically--to pay the salaries of 1.9 million people (or 86% of its
- civilian payroll) as well as benefits for war veterans and subsidies
- for farmers. This year the Internal Revenue Service will send
- refunds to the bank accounts of 10.5 million taxpayers, 7% more
- than last year. And in the private sector, computers are now
- handling 10% of the $50 billion in money transfers between corporations
- and their suppliers.
- </p>
- <p> So has the cashless era of the philosophers finally arrived?
- So far, with every advance made by encoded plastic cards and
- automated billing systems, there have also been glitches or
- concerns about fraud and privacy. At Chemical Bank, for example,
- automated teller machines mistakenly deducted a total of $16
- million from 100,000 customer accounts in February because of
- a typographical error in a single line of computer code. The
- bank bounced 430 checks as a result of the malfunction.
- </p>
- <p> Or consider the problem of fraud, which high-speed computers
- can unwittingly abet. According to the IRS, the number of fraudulent
- electronic filings doubled to 26,000 last year, at a cost to
- the government of nearly $54 million, as computers spat out
- refunds before IRS examiners could go over the returns. Such
- incidents have led critics to warn that the rush to automated
- payment systems is proceeding too fast even for computer experts.
- "The demands on software are far outpacing the development of
- software," says Dain Gary, a manager at the Software Engineering
- Institute at Carnegie-Mellon University.
- </p>
- <p> Small wonder that the advance toward a cashless society has
- created a new category of frustrated consumers. Hudson Hendren,
- an engineer in Herndon, Virginia, was mortified last summer
- when the phone company shut off his service after failing to
- receive a payment he had made through the ScanFone system. In
- New York City, hundreds of subway passengers complained last
- month that the new electronic fare cards were double-charging
- them for rides or failing to let them through the automated
- turnstiles. A spokesman for the Metropolitan Transportation
- Authority blamed the confusion on riders who had not yet learned
- to use the cards properly and were running them twice through
- the bar-code reader at the turnstile.
- </p>
- <p> Above all, high-tech payment systems create new problems of
- privacy even as they increase convenience and efficiency. Maryland
- became the first state to provide debit cards for welfare clients
- last year when it issued its "Independence Card" to 170,000
- households that received public aid. The cards enable recipients
- to shop at supermarkets such as Giant and Safeway as well as
- at 3,500 other stores around the state; families on welfare
- can also use the cards to withdraw cash from ATM machines and
- to pay utility bills and rent for public housing. Among other
- benefits, these cards have virtually eliminated the expense
- of preparing and distributing welfare checks.
- </p>
- <p> But privacy advocates fear that state bureaucrats could use
- the cards to pry into the personal lives of welfare recipients
- by tracing their electronic purchases. "Poor people are an easy
- mark," says Robert Ellis Smith, who publishes the Privacy Journal,
- a monthly periodical in Providence, Rhode Island. "They're resented
- by the public, which thinks they should be monitored."
- </p>
- <p> The push for a cashless society is gaining momentum, however,
- if only because making money disappear is also a way of saving
- money. There are about 12 billion pieces of U.S. paper currency,
- worth $150 billion, circulating worldwide, which works out to
- about $30 for every person on earth. Keeping all that paper
- in use is a costly chore for the government. Most $1 bills wear
- out after about 18 months. To retire, destroy and replace all
- aging currency costs the government an estimated $200 million
- a year. Currency is cumbersome for businesses as well. People
- have to count it, armored cars have to carry it, bank vaults
- have to store it and security guards have to protect it.
- </p>
- <p> Checks too are expensive to handle. About 55 billion checks
- are written every year (more than 37% of all consumer payments),
- and the processing costs the nation's financial institutions
- about $1.30 each. Banks end up losing money on about half of
- all checking accounts, since the handling costs often exceed
- the interest earned on lending out the deposits. An electronic
- transfer, on the other hand, costs only 15 cents per blip.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the biggest users of electronic transfers have thus
- reaped substantial benefits. The Federal Government saved $133
- million last year by paying 47% of its 815 million bills by
- computer rather than by mail. And General Electric, which received
- 40% of its $60 billion in revenues electronically in 1993, expects
- to spend $2.5 million less for stamps and envelopes this year
- because it is using computers to pay 1,000 of its suppliers.
- </p>
- <p> But savings are not the only reason Americans are warming to
- the idea of parting with their cash. Electronic transfers are
- starting to become convenient. These days 23% of homes have
- personal computers, in contrast to 11% five years ago. As a
- result, some 900,000 subscribers are signed up with banking
- services via online information systems like Prodigy. "I don't
- know how I got along without it all this time," says Floraine
- Alba, a grandmother in New Providence, New Jersey. Alba used
- to write 50 checks a month. But she now uses ScanFone and willingly
- pays $11.95 a month to cut three to four hours off her bill
- chores. "Spending all day writing checks and stuffing envelopes
- was bad enough," adds Alba. "I then had to go stand in line
- at the post office."
- </p>
- <p> The main weapon against cash and checks is plastic--credit
- cards, bank debit cards and so-called smart cards. Together
- they represent 9% of total consumer payment transactions and
- are expected to reach 15% by 2001. Besides taxicabs and newsstands,
- credit cards are employed in parking garages and movie theaters
- and could soon be the way that Americans pay their taxes, if
- industry lobbyists prevail. But since card issuers charge an
- average of 16.5% while the irs extracts only 7% for late payments,
- consumer groups warn that taxpayers should be wary. So far,
- stiff interest rates have done little to curb the use of plastic.
- The number of Visa and MasterCards in use has climbed 3% in
- the past year, to 225 million, while credit-card transactions
- have jumped 7.3%, to 1.7 billion.
- </p>
- <p> But the fastest-growing charge cards are the ones that automatically
- deduct money from checking accounts. The amounts riding on such
- debit-card use could zoom nearly 600% over the next eight years,
- according to H. Spencer Nilson of the Nilson Report, an Oxnard,
- California, newsletter that follows this industry.While Visa's
- credit-card business grew 16% last year, the use of its "CheckCard"
- debit service jumped 47%, as consumers sought to avoid finance
- and interest charges.
- </p>
- <p> Both credit and debit cards could one day be eclipsed by smart
- cards, which look like conventional bank plastic but store information
- on computer chips instead of magnetic stripes. Such cards could
- hold, say, the profile of an airline passenger, including his
- frequent-flyer points and seat preferences. With a single swipe
- of a card through an airline's electronic reader, a traveler
- could make a reservation and get a seat assignment.
- </p>
- <p> The card can also carry specific dollar values. Newspapers like
- the Philadelphia Inquirer are testing $10 cards that would deduct
- 50 cents each time they are inserted in news racks. No more
- fumbling for loose change. Telephone companies are issuing cards
- good for so many minutes of calling time. And a brand-new electronic
- highway toll system developed by AT&T and Lockheed in Orange
- County, California, lets drivers pay without stopping. Radio
- receivers pick up signals from dashboard-mounted cards as vehicles
- zip through toll lanes. The fees are deducted directly from
- the drivers' bank accounts. Says Bob Bess, a customer-service
- representative who lives in Trabuco Canyon, California: "It's
- kind of fun to whiz by at 60 miles an hour while others are
- waiting in line."
- </p>
- <p> Not everyone striving to be cashless has achieved this sense
- of breezy convenience. But the vision seems only a few mishaps
- and controversies away.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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