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WorthyNews: Australia Rushing To Become World’s First Functionally Cashless Society


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By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News

CANBERRA (Worthy News) – Australia has begun unleashing a digital revolution to possibly become the world’s first functionally cashless nation by 2025 after a digital identity (ID) document scheme will be rolled out across the country by July, Worthy News learned Tuesday.

Yet not everyone is happy to jump on board the fast-moving digital ‘train’ with residents living outside metropolitan areas and elderly Australians expressing concerns about these developments.

The government argues that the digital ID removes the pain of handing over physical copies of a driver’s license, passport, or birth certificate, making setting up a new bank account easier. The center-left administration of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese claimed that digital ID is a “secure, convenient, voluntary, and inclusive” way for Australians to verify their identity online.

However, critics say a digital ID can result in errors and bias, aggregation of sensitive personal information, hacking and identity fraud, and denial of access to essential services and entitlements.

There is also concern that homeless people, as well as other vulnerable people, including many of the elderly, will be left out of the digital transformation in which the government invested more than half a billion US dollars.

The digital ID is only the first step towards a cashless society. Macquarie Bank, Australia’s 5th largest bank, is officially transitioning to digital payments by November 2024.

Money experts in Australia also warned citizens that banks could start “Cash rationing “at cash dispensers, also known as ATMs. Several other banks soon followed, with Bank Commonwealth, NAB, and ANZ banks stopping handling cash in a few branches and announcing closing more ATMs and branches soon.

LOWER DEMAND

The move will be made because of lower demand for banknotes, bank officials said. “I’d say we’ll be functionally cashless by the end of 2025 — it’ll just be a complete rarity,” said Richard Holden, professor of economics at UNSW Business School at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia.

“But unless the government gets involved in accelerating the process, I think we’ll be actually cashless by 2030,” he stressed, with cash transactions reportedly comprising roughly six percent of the total.

It doesn’t stop there, with at least one prominent bank customer warning Australia’s move towards a digital society will come at the expense of fundamental freedoms.

Crispin Rovere, an Australian poker player and author, expressed his frustrations with Westpac, saying that the bank allegedly froze his accounts without any explanation.

Rovere explained that he deposited winnings from a poker game into his Westpac account, adding that the amount was essentially insignificant. He said it was “way, way under” the $10,000 threshold financial regulators have established as the trigger for suspicious transactions.”

The issue arose when he tried to pay a bill at a hotel with his bank card but was denied. The only reason the bank gave for flagging the account was because the deposit was made in a different state from when he opened it, Rovere said in published remarks. 4

The poker player suggested that Westpac doesn’t believe that its verified customers deserve the flexibility to make deposits anywhere there’s a bank branch. On social media, he warned that the use of cash is now “stigmatized” and could soon be “criminalized” in a nation already embracing digital IDs.

The post Australia Rushing To Become World’s First Functionally Cashless Society appeared first on Worthy Christian News.

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This is a bad idea but it will grow worldwide, and be a bad idea worldwide when does.

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OO's house is pretty much there already.  We don't use cash for much of anything.  I don't even carry much with me anywhere.

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Takes a fair bit to verify this article as it appears cobbled together from a variety of sources.

Found some of the quotes here and there. It would be nice (and probably good practice) to include the sources of the quotes (it looks like it might have almost happened as there is a random "4" at the end of the second last paragraph - possibly a footnote?

 

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