The forces that want to get rid of cash aren't embarrassed to use the opportunity presented by the pandemic to further their cause, says Thorsten Polleit in his essay for finews.first.


This article is published on finews.first, a forum for authors specialized in economic and financial topics.


Worried and scared as they are, close to collective hysteria, people keep asking themselves: if coins and notes are passed on from hand to hand on a daily basis – isn't that going to foster the spread of the virus? Wouldn't it make sense to simply stop using cash, or even better, simply abolish it?

Sadly, the infectious disease experts don't play along. In fact, they have given the clean bill of health. A virus of the corona type is spread through the mini-droplets that emerge when you cough and sneeze. There is no specific risk of infection in using coins and notes for payments. Of course, there is no certainty to it. But the evidence from experience is clear-cut: cash doesn't transmit the coronavirus, otherwise, the number of cases would be much higher.

«The European Commission has plans to abolish the 1 euro cent and 2 euro cent coins»

Which doesn't stop the opponents of cash. They stick to the strategy of the many pinpricks to put people off cash. They claim for instance that cash is being used for drugs and terrorism. Or, as has happened in the eurozone, they put a stigma on large denomination notes: the European Central Bank (ECB) decided to withdraw the 500-euro-note from circulation. It doesn't issue any new such notes and keeps back those it receives in the regular transaction business.

The European Commission has plans to abolish the 1 euro cent and 2 euro cent coins. Brussels says they are expendable and abolishing them will save unnecessary expenses for retailers and consumers alike. But stop: the logic used in favor of abolishing euro small coins, means that all euro coins will have to be abolished, one after another – after all, the ECB is making sure there is inflation that makes everything more expensive and the use of euro coins more «costly».

«The wisdom of ‹look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves› is ridden roughshod over»

And that's not all: if the small coins are gone, people's understanding of the «history of buying power» gets eradicated. The chronic inflation of prices of goods, which the ECB is creating with its monetary policy, renders higher nominal values of coins and notes necessary. With the disappearance of small coin units, the inflationary track of an inflationary monetary policy is removed and the ability to criticize the perpetual inflation policy weakened.

Furthermore, lest we forget: the popular wisdom of «look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves» is ridden roughshod over. Small coins are symbolic of the appreciation of small services and businesses, and they teach people to use money with care and conscious to achieve financial success. Small coins have something to do with an enlightened and mature culture of money.

«In fact, there are two main reasons for why they want to get rid of cash»

Of course, banks, credit card firms and providers of electronic payment systems have an intrinsic interest in fewer cash payments. They are lobbying politicians accordingly. But they aren't the decisive factor for why governments want to get rid of cash. There are two main reasons for why they want to get rid of cash.

The first reason is the global debt overload getting out of hand. To reduce the liabilities of states and banks, central banks must keep negative interest. States thereby can take out loans at negative interest and reduce their debt load. But as long as cash exists, the policy of negative interest remains constrained. Citizens escape paying interest on cash by withdrawing assets. Hence cash has to go.

«Once cash is gone, the state will no longer need to hold back in its dealings with the subordinates»

The second reason is cash being in the way of the total surveillance state; the state that we know today wants to know everything, wants to steer everything and won't cease pushing until it has reached that goal. And once cash has been abolished, people are completely transparent beings, and their financial privacy will have gone. There will be no way to escape the demands of the state. Once cash is gone, the state will no longer need to hold back in its dealings with the subordinates and become all-powerful.

The evils that are used as pretenses for abolishing cash will be replaced by even much bigger evils. The attempt to accelerate the fight against cash using the coronavirus pandemic shows just how serious the enemies of cash are – and how comprehensive the opposition has to be by those who want to preserve or regain what is left of freedoms of citizens and business: cash has to be defended and retained.


Thorsten Polleit is chief economist at gold trader Degussa, investment advisor and the author of several books. He is also a professor of economics at the University of Bayreuth. The German citizen is president of the Ludwig von Mises Institut in Germany.


Bisherige Texte von: Rudi BogniRolf BanzWerner VogtWalter WittmannAlfred Mettler, Robert HolzachCraig MurrayDavid ZollingerArthur BolligerBeat KappelerChris RoweStefan GerlachMarc Lussy, Nuno FernandesRichard EggerDieter RuloffMarco BargelSteve HankeUrs Schoettli, Maurice PedergnanaStefan Kreuzkamp, Oliver BussmannMichael BenzAlbert Steck, Martin DahindenThomas FedierAlfred MettlerBrigitte Strebel, Mirjam Staub-Bisang, Thorsten PolleitKim IskyanStephen DoverDenise Kenyon-RouvinezChristian DreyerKinan Khadam-Al-JameRobert HemmiAnton AffentrangerYves Mirabaud, Hans-Martin KrausGérard Guerdat, Mario BassiStephen ThariyanDan SteinbockRino BoriniBert FlossbachMichael HasenstabGuido SchillingWerner E. RutschDorte Bech VizardAdriano B. Lucatelli, Maya BhandariJean TiroleHans Jakob RothMarco Martinelli, Thomas Sutter, Tom King, Werner PeyerThomas KupferPeter Kurer, Arturo Bris, Frédéric Papp, James Syme, Dennis Larsen, Bernd Kramer, Marionna Wegenstein, Armin JansNicolas Roth, Hans Ulrich Jost, Patrick Hunger, Fabrizio QuirighettiClaire Shaw, Peter FanconiAlex Wolf, Dan Steinbock, Patrick Scheurle, Sandro Occhilupo, Will Ballard, Michael Bornhäusser, Nicholas Yeo, Claude-Alain Margelisch, Jean-François Hirschel, Jens Pongratz, Samuel Gerber, Philipp Weckherlin, Anne Richards, Antoni Trenchev, Benoit Barbereau, Pascal R. Bersier, Shaul Lifshitz, Ana Botín, Martin Gilbert, Jesper Koll, Ingo Rauser, Carlo Capaul, Markus Winkler, Konrad Hummler, Thomas Steinemann, Christina Böck, Guillaume Compeyron, Miro Zivkovic, Alexander F. Wagner, Eric Heymann, Christoph Sax, Felix Brem, Jochen Möbert, Jacques-Aurélien Marcireau, Peter Hody, Ursula Finsterwald, Claudia Kraaz, Michel Longhini, Stefan Blum, Zsolt Kohalmi, Nicolas Ramelet, Søren Bjønness, Lamara von Albertini, Andreas Britt, Gilles Prince, Darren Williams, Shanu Hinduja, Salman Ahmed, Stéphane Monier, Peter van der Welle, Beat Wittmann, Ken Orchard, Christian Gast, Didier Saint-Georges, Jürgen Braunstein, Jeffrey Vögeli, Gérard Piasko, Fiona Frick, Stefan Schneider, Matthias Hunn, Andreas Vetsch, Teodoro Cocca, Mark Hawtin, Fabiana Fedeli, Marionna Wegenstein, Kim Fournais, Carole Millet, Lars Jaeger, Swetha Ramachandran, Brigitte Kaps, Thomas Stucki, Teodoro Cocca, Neil Shearing, Claude Baumann, Guy de Blonay, Tom Naratil, Oliver Berger, Robert Sharps, Santosh Brivio, Tobias Müller, Florian Wicki, Jean Keller, Fabrizio Pagani, Niels Lan Doky, Michael Welti, Karin M. Klossek, Ralph Ebert, Johnny El Hachem, Judith Basad and Katharina Bart.