In 1661, Stockholms Banco, the precursor to the Swedish Riksbank, issued Europe’s first banknotes, on thick watermarked paper bearing the bank’s seal and eight handwritten signatures.
Last year — as Britain did last week — Sweden launched a new series of notes, cheery affairs featuring 20th-century Swedish cultural giants such as Astrid Lindgren, the creator of Pippi Longstocking, Greta Garbo and filmmaker Ingmar Bergman. However, like its Nordic neighbors Norway, Denmark and Finland, Sweden is fast becoming an almost entirely cashless society.
“I don’t use cash any more, for anything,” said Louise Henriksson, 26, a teaching assistant. “You just do not need it. Shops do not want it; lots of banks do not even have it. Even for a candy bar or a paper, you use a card or phone.”
Swedish buses have not taken cash for years, it is impossible to buy a ticket on the Stockholm metro with cash, retailers are legally entitled to refuse coins and notes, and street vendors — and even churches — increasingly prefer card or phone payments.
According to the Riksbank, cash transactions made up barely 2 percent of the value of all payments made in Sweden last year — a figure some see dropping to 0.5 percent by 2020. In shops, cash is now used for barely 20 percent of transactions, half the number of five years ago, and way below the global average of 75 percent.
And astonishingly, about 900 of Sweden’s 1,600 bank branches no longer keep cash on hand or take cash deposits — and many, especially in rural areas, no longer have ATMs. Circulation of the country’s currency has fallen from about 106 billion kronor (US$13.01 billion) in 2009 to 80 billion kronor last year.
“I think, in practice, Sweden will pretty much be a cashless society within about five years,” said Niklas Arvidsson, an associate professor specializing in payment systems innovation at Stockholm’s Royal Institute of Technology (KTH).
Arvidsson says that the country’s head start in the field began in the 1960s, when banks persuaded employers and workers to use digital bank transfers for wages as a matter of course, with credit and debit cards receiving a boost in the 1990s when Sweden’s banks started charging for checks.
Cards are now the main form of payment: According to Visa, Swedes use them more than three times as often as the average European, making an average of 207 payments per card last year.
More recently, mobile phone apps have also taken off in spectacular fashion. Swish, a hugely popular app developed jointly with the major banks including Nordea, Handelsbanken, SEB, Danske Bank and Swedbank, uses phone numbers to allow anyone with a smartphone to transfer money from one bank account to another in real time.
“Swish has pretty much killed cash for most people, as far as person-to-person payments are concerned,” Arvidsson said. “It has the same features as a cash payment — real-time clearing, the same as handing over a banknote. And it is now making inroads into payments to businesses, too.”
Adopted by nearly half the Swedish population, Swish is now used to make more than 9 million payments a month. (A similar Danish app, MobilePay, was used by over 3 million Danes — in a country of 5.6 million — to make about 90 million transactions last year.)
Street salesmen, from hotdog vendors to homeless magazine sellers, have enthusiastically adopted iZettle, a cheap and easy Swedish system designed to allow sole traders and small businesses to take card payments via an app and mini card-reader plugged into their phones, with many reporting sales increases of up to 30 percent.
Even Swedish churches have adapted, displaying their phone numbers at the end of each service and asking parishioners to use Swish to drop their contribution into the virtual Sunday collection.
One Stockholm church said last year only 15 percent of its donations were in cash; the remainder were all by phone.
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