Sleepwalking Into a Cashless Society
Central bank digital currencies would destroy any chance for financial privacy, but society is willingly moving in that direction.

Philip Lane, chief economist of the European Central Bank, recently expressed urgency for the need to develop a digital euro—also known as a central bank digital currency (CBDC)—to compete against stablecoins such as Tether and electronic payment systems developed by U.S. tech firms, such as Google Pay and Apple Pay. Not content with eliminating cash, now the goal of central banks is to eliminate any competing electronic payment system.
We're sleepwalking into a world with digital currencies without any government coercion whatsoever. As a 51-year-old Generation Xer, I carry lots of cash in my wallet. I teach personal finance at the local university and recently asked a class of about 30 students if any of them had any cash. Not one of them had a single bill or coin on them. They use debit cards, credit cards, Venmo, and Apple Pay. As it turns out, cash usage among the 18–24 age cohort has declined from 28 percent to 13 percent over the last five years. Most like the convenience of electronic payments, even though studies show that people spend 12 percent to 18 percent more when using credit cards than cash. If the government does attempt to implement a digital dollar, there will be little resistance to it.
Currently, there is $2.36 trillion in U.S. currency in circulation. Of course, much of this is held outside our borders, owing to the dollar's dominance as the global reserve currency. The most common denomination of U.S. currency is the $100 bill. There are more $100 bills in circulation than $1 bills. Many residents of foreign countries, such as Argentina, consider the U.S. dollar to be a store of value and a hedge against inflation and local currency depreciation. If the U.S. government ever decided to phase out paper currency, it would have far-reaching effects around the globe.
Promoters of a digital currency allege that it would cause a drop in criminal and illicit activity. That may be correct, or people may simply resort to another medium of exchange or barter. Philosophically speaking, virtue is not possible without the freedom of choice. If people can't choose to misbehave, it does not make them virtuous. A society in which nobody has the freedom to misbehave is far more horrifying than a society where people actually misbehave.
Cash is anonymous. Just because one isn't doing anything illegal doesn't mean one wants the government to know where they go to lunch every day. If you have a complete electronic record of someone's economic activity, you have a pretty good idea of who they are as a person, which is why economic privacy is so important.
Far more sinister than the desire to socially engineer good behavior is the potential for central banks to implement stimulative monetary policy using negative interest rates. Cash pays no interest. Interest rates are off the pre-pandemic lows, so today, it is not hard to find a bank that pays a decent interest rate on a savings account. But in the 2010s, interest rates were zero for about a decade, and central planners believed they could reverse deflation by setting interest rates at negative levels. Negative interest rates mean that your money in the bank loses value over time. Naturally, people would withdraw their money in the form of cash, because zero interest is better than negative interest, but if cash didn't exist, people would be forced to spend the cash in the bank before it lost value. Since we're now dealing with inflation rather than disinflation, these talks have mostly dried up, but negative rates could be attempted at some point in the future.
Of course, any income received in the form of cash is invisible to the IRS and cannot be taxed. The informal economy accounts for about 7 percent of gross domestic product in the United States, which is low, relative to the rest of the world. Low-income people absolutely rely on cash. Households with incomes under $25,000 use cash for 36 percent of their payments, while households with incomes over $150,000 use cash for only 10 percent of theirs. Lower-middle class or poor households are frequently un- or under-banked and have practically no savings rate as it is—forcing them into the formal economy would reduce their standard of living even further.
The number of cashless businesses is exploding. Part of this is consumer preferences—paying with a card or a phone is less awkward and clumsy than having a bunch of change slamming around your pocket. But what we gain in convenience, we lose in privacy and freedom. The chance that a digital dollar will be implemented in the next 20 years is exceptionally high, and most of the population will go along with it—willingly.
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The Madison Avenue boomer groomer consumers with public educations seem eager for easier access to further indebtedness and have disregard for security or privacy.
And not a single word was said about Trump's EO forbidding the creation of a US CBDC, at least for the next four years.
Interesting article.
Who still thinks anyone gives a damn about freedom OR privacy?
Social media's dominance shows that it is, in fact, less than nobody.
Even if you don't participate, you already are known.
Exactly.
I would never give up my DNA to those outfits like 23&me, but my kids did, so I am half way in without my consent.
I don't have any social media accounts, but am tagged in photos by many of my friends and family.
It's true; you can run, but you can't hide.
This is a lot of why I dislike having my picture taken.
I manage to keep a fairly low profile. Don't use my real, full name on any social media (and generally avoid it like the plague). Of course you can find some things about me. But I used to be in the phone book too when that was a thing.
Yes, it's going to be very difficult to obscure all information about you. That doesn't mean nobody cares about privacy.
No offense Zeb, but I think you aren’t comprehending the full extent of our government’s abilities. Honestly, we’re sorta fucked as it relates to privacy. Not saying we should give up but I can tell you what I learned about privacy in my lawsuit against the State of Arizona over a decade ago and it’s gotten worse, much worse.
Sarc prefers an empty liquor bottle style currency. Only way he'd ever be successful.
The booze thing you do to Sarc offends me only because I know from years ago how you felt about Prohibitionist drug policies.
Lol. This will be good. Please do share with the class.
Sarc is an admitted alcoholic.
“You’re The rapist” a shrike sock?
Zoo/zooneedles. Remember me now chubs?
Nobody does buddy.
You’re The rapist now
Are you? Or did you just rape him and take over his account?
Jesse, so what if he is an alcoholic? I know several quite accomplished individuals who are also alcoholic assuming your derogatory allegations are true. Why should we care other than as an observation that you’ve become a drug bigot in addition to being a genocidal Zionist ball sac licking Semite hating asswipe?
I see you've offered zero support for your initial reaction lol.
Sarc isn't accomplished. Which makes me question your low accomplishment life looking up to the drunk moron.
Drug bigot? That's a new one.
You seem to praise a lot of bad choices. How fucked up is your life lol.
Just glad you showed you have no actual point to make except for stanning for a loser alcoholic. Good for you!
Sarc is a homeless hobo who resides in a piss soaked alley and sleeps in a refrigerator box. When his welfare runs out, he supplements his rotgut booze budget by working a men’s room gloryhole, and doing full on gay for pay in the alley behind the dive bar where he hangs out.
But you gotta give him a whole sixer if you finish inside him. He has his pride.
Back in the 1990's, Clinton pushed the idea of a cashless society but backed off over privacy concerns.
Any time any politician of either party recommends a cashless society, they're really advocating a police state to monitor you.
Monitor you my ass, control you.
"There are more $100 bills in circulation than $1 bills."
Couldn't prove it by me.
RIP strip clubs.
In Chumby’s wallet:
Eight $100 bills
Eleven $20 bills
One $10 bill
Nine $1 bills
Nice, but I’m not sure I’d walk around with $1,131 in my wallet.
I carry my trillion dollar platinum coin in my front pocket.
Mine is in my money bin. In the swimming pool.
That doesn’t add up to $1131 and that isn’t all Chumby carries.
$1039 and a 10mm? 😀
Well, given that the USA will declare bankruptcy soon; I'm hording bottle caps to exchange in our post apocalyptic wasteland.
What's a fair price for a bottle cap in Bitcoin?
5 Nuka colas
Sleepwalking Into a Strapless Society
Title of ENB’s upcoming article on pegging.
Shouldn't that be "strap-on society"?
No
Will Sullum be co-writing that one?
Think the Federal Reserve Act started it all.
Once upon a time Gold and Silver (REAL value) was the trade median.
Spain and others found out the hard way that gold and silver also only have value based on supply and demand just like everything else. But at least there's some level of real scarcity there.
And real instead of imaginary value in them.
The electrical market uses both extensively.
The only real value in paper is the amount of heat from a fire of it.
During the campaign, this was the most important difference between Trump and Kamala. He was utterly opposed to central bank digital currency and the Biden admin was already known to be pushing for it.
A CDBC would be the most powerful tool for tyranny ever devised. For this reason alone I'm glad Trump won.
Oddly the author didn't find that relevant. Trump issued a EO banning CBDC in his first few days if memory serves me.
The non-Federal "Federal" Reserve does not answer to Trump.
If you still think Trump is "on our side," you are but a fool. A George Soros man for his Secretary of the Treasury?!
...
Sez you. I think a world in which it's physically impossible for us to hurt each other would be great.
What, you think the intention is more significant than the actual damage? That's nuts!
Well, that depends on how the impossibility of hurting each other comes about. I can think of some possibilities that don't seem too great. Plus, the real scenario he's talking about is not being able to make transactions that the government disapproves of, which doesn't sound good at all.
It doesn't sound good only because the government might disapprove of some transactions. The problem is the government's disapproving transactions. Get rid of that problem. All transactions should be allowed.
Opposing the technology that could stop transactions is attacking the wrong thing. Like defunding the police. The problem's not the police, the problem's government policy. Same with surveillance cameras.
I certainly agree with you on what should be. But in my experience, what should be and what is are often not in accord. Seems prudent to make sure we retain tools that allow us to work around unreasonable governments.
You're gonna be trading bottle caps.
""Ellison said AI would be used in the future to constantly watch and analyze vast surveillance systems, like security cameras, police body cameras, doorbell cameras, and vehicle dashboard cameras.
"We're going to have supervision," Ellison said. "Every police officer is going to be supervised at all times, and if there's a problem, AI will report that problem and report it to the appropriate person. Citizens will be on their best behavior because we are constantly recording and reporting everything that's going on."
Ellison also expects AI drones to replace police cars in high-speed chases. "You just have a drone follow the car," Ellison said. "It's very simple in the age of autonomous drones." He did not say if those drones would broadcast the chases on network news.""
https://us.yahoo.com/tech/billionaire-larry-ellison-says-vast-160646740.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYmluZy5jb20v&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAByQ4DnlI8dlqr0EEKsGj4LZe8ClojixqaiUYuQ4Br07RtwryTyngj3yNkhXfAD7uTtypqox6Q7iCGC_i1Yo2Xu8L_vlOpQrxSdNCkCGXPNalcVNQqELLZJh6kxrB8J3VXYJcYM9F8ovFTfPdPSFRVgrIaRZxJSGSAq5j9V-YsaE
And I'll top that off with Musk.
""Back in 2017 at the World Government Summit, Musk famously said about universal basic income, "I don't think we're going to have a choice." It wasn't a political stance or even his personal preference—it was Musk realistically predicting the future. With artificial intelligence becoming increasingly advanced, he sees a world where jobs traditionally done by humans rapidly vanish.
But fast-forward a few years, Musk's vision has evolved. During an appearance at the 2024 VivaTech conference in Paris, he didn't just double down on universal income—he took it further. Musk now anticipates a scenario where society doesn't settle for basic income, but instead adopts something far more ambitious: a "high universal income.""
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/i-don-t-think-we-re-going-to-have-a-choice-elon-musk-predicts-universal-income-will-eventually-be-high-but-fears-people-will-feel-useless/ar-AA1zRGcy
Shit like that makes me so happy I was born in the 60s.
Yep, just like we slept walked into domestic surveillance.
Or like we slept-walked(?) into guns. They're just tools, man. You've got to control them.
Just the ones in Alec Baldwin's hands
"Sleepwalking," LOL.
NOPE. Being herded to it by the banking tribe, as usual. Those of us screaming about the end of freedom are suppressed by the controlled media and ignored by our so-called "representatives."
Most of the atrocious abominations of modern society did not materialize by accident or carelessness, but by design. This includes almost all wars in the last 200 years, and all of the "security measures" that have eroded freedom.
You just use anonymous credit cards like you can already buy at Walmart. That’s how it’s done in the ShadowRun universe. They have credit sticks that are under their name and ones that anyone can use.