Apple Pay And Digital Currency Mean Time Is Running Out For Physical Cash
Editor’s Note: Ilya Subkhankulov is the COO of BTX Trader,
the digital currency trading platform. He has also recently launched a
consumer-friendly bitcoin and dogecoin buying service called Celery.
Since the advent of electronic payments, there has been a clear shift
away from cash and checks. Credit and debit cards, and more recently
prepaid debit cards, have been a staple of many consumers’ daily lives.
With the announcement of Apple Pay, Apple is betting that consumers
want an even more convenient way to pay in person. Many in the payment
space have attempted to make this evolutionary leap, but it seems that
with Apple’s dominance of the easy-to-use mobile device market, it is
uniquely positioned to become successful. There are existing examples of
similar, successful implementations, with consumers in South Korea and
Japan having long used mobile phones at the point of sale.
Glenbrook Partners, a payments strategy and consulting firm, believes
that consumer adoption of new payment mechanisms comes down to two
things: significant increases in convenience and/or perceived financial
gains.
Apple Pay has internalized these two main drivers of consumer
adoption and will likely be successful given its relationships with
major card networks and banks. Similarly bitcoin,
once past the learning curve, has significant conveniences over other
payment methods and as the software evolves, will become more so.
However, the financial benefits have not yet materialized.
Another parallel between Apple Pay and bitcoin is security. Apple Pay
employs tokenization of information across the network and so is one of
the most secure ways to pay in person, along with cash.
Apple Pay is well-positioned to make mobile payments pervasive with
220,000 merchants already signed up, an estimated 5 to 10 percent of the
millions of merchant locations in the U.S.
It’s important to note, though, that Apple Pay has a dozen partner
banks representing 83 percent of credit card spending in the U.S. but
makes no mention of debit cards, which are issued by 14,000 merchants.
As Generation Y is considered the debit card generation, hopefully Apple
can cover that market, as well.
How does bitcoin benefit? Bitcoin depends on only one network — the
Internet. Consumers are required to use mobile devices to initiate
payment. Apple will shift consumer behavior to their devices and will
make security a major consideration when consumers choose payment
methods, especially after the recent parade of cyber intrusions of banks
and merchants.
Bitcoin, as a payment network, is unmatched in its global design,
affordability and security. Apple Pay is helping to lead the charge, and
as bitcoin matures it will benefit from it. Rather than being a threat
to bitcoin, as some commentators have rhetorically suggested,
Apple Pay should provide digital currency with a boost — it could be
the killer app that digital currency has been waiting for.
With digital currency, there’s nothing to jangle in your pockets and
weigh you down as you walk. You can’t lose digital currency down the
back of the couch. There’s no paperwork required and it supports online
payments. Other advantages that digital currency has over physical,
which may not be so obvious to the casual observer, are the lower
transaction fees and the lack of a central issuer – so the user doesn’t
have to put their faith in a banking system that may have let them down
in the past.
According to a 2014 report on the use of cash by
the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, cash is still king when it
comes to retail payments under $25 in the United States. The report
states that the fact that debit cards tend to be used frequently for
person-to-person transfers and several other categories of expenditure
such as gifts, food, transportation and entertainment indicates that
cash usage likely is not the result of a lack of access to alternative
payment options.
The average transaction size for many of these expenditure categories
is relatively low, suggesting that the reason cash is the most or
second-most frequently used payment instrument is because small value
transactions tend to dominate these categories.
The conclusion I draw from this is that cash is encouraged by
merchants and retailers for small transaction sizes either through
minimum transaction sizes or with higher prices by including taxes. Who
can blame them? The transaction fees for credit and debit cards erode
profits for smaller transactions, 30 cents + 3 percent for each
transaction.
As bitcoin grows and Apple Pay extends its reach over the next few
years, cash will shrink. The governments are incentivized to promote
digital currencies because of the visibility they can glean from their
public ledgers. Bitcoin analytics startups such as Blocktrail and Coinalytics
are receiving funding to help the world understand what’s going on in
the payment network, much the same way the traditional banking system
has been monitored.
Apple Pay and digital currency will play a massive part in changing
how consumers perceive — and make — low-value payments. The businesses
that are quickest to realize this will be the ones that benefit – but
believe me, the days of physical cash are numbered.
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