The Decline in Currency Use at a National Retail Chain

25 Pages Posted: 22 Oct 2018 Last revised: 29 Apr 2020

See all articles by Zhu Wang

Zhu Wang

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

Alexander L. Wolman

Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

Date Written: 2018

Abstract

We bring new evidence to bear on the contributions of changing transaction sizes and changing demographics to the decline in cash payments at a national retail chain. On average, across the thousands of store locations in our study, the share of cash transactions fell by 8.6 percentage points from February 2011 to February 2015. Our statistical model attributes approximately 1.3 percentage points of that decline to increasing transaction sizes. Changes in demographic and other location-specific variables contribute between 0.5 and 1.3 percentage points, so our analysis attributes approximately three-quarters of the decline in cash use to a pure time effect. The time effect stands in for reductions in the cost and increases in the availability and security of debit and credit cards, improvements in consumers' perceptions of cards, and any other factors omitted from our analysis.

Keywords: retail payments, transactions, currency

Suggested Citation

Wang, Zhu and Wolman, Alexander L., The Decline in Currency Use at a National Retail Chain (2018). Economic Quarterly, Issue 2Q, pp. 53-77, 2018, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3269122

Zhu Wang (Contact Author)

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond ( email )

P.O. Box 27622
Richmond, VA 23261
United States

Alexander L. Wolman

Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond ( email )

P.O. Box 27622
Richmond, VA 23261
United States

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