Fr. 116.00

Ending Cash - The Public Benefits of Federal Electronic Currency

English · Hardback

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Description

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If America's tangible cash could be transformed into federal electronic currency (FEDEC), the social and economic benefits would be profound. Warwick argues eloquently why government should mandate cashlessness, then demonstrates not only why it can be done, but how to go about doing it. He shows that because the private sector will not and can not replace cash, government must do it; indeed, government FEDEC is superior to a system of private currencies. Cash handling costs the nation between one and two percent of the GDP, and cash is the lubricant for most of America's crime. By eliminating cash the saving from crime reduction alone would amount to hundreds of billions of dollars yearly. But naturally there would be issues of special concern if a FEDEC system were to become a hot public debate. Privacy, security, practicality, convenience are just some. Warwick tackles them here and, as no other books attempts to do, offers a practical plan for creating cashlessness. Well reasoned, meticulously documented, Ending Cash is a major contribution to what could soon become an important social debate-a debate that should, in the author's judgment, be started now.

Ending Cash argues that America's tangible cash should be transformed into a new federal electronic currency (FEDEC). Although Warwick admits that private bank card systems and/or the Internet may some day supplant cash, he explains why this will not happen soon, certainly not in our lifetime. Warwick emphasizes that the unrealized benefits of cashlessness far exceed the mere convenience that citizens generally look for and enjoy in bank card usage. While stressing the relative inefficiency of cash, said to run $60 billion a year just in handling costs, he illustrates the profound role cash plays in most crimes, including tax evasion, all of which could be prevented with a resultant public savings in the hundreds of billions of dollars each year if a federal system were created.

Against the background of consumer-oriented EFT systems, including credit-, debit-, and smart-card systems, Warwick explains the disinterest of industry in achieving cashlessness, as well as its organizational incapacity to carry it out. He thus argues the need for government involvement. Among the many facets he covers are privacy, security, technical requirements, and operational costs. He also explains the issue of employing private currencies as a replacement for cash, and how federal e-currency might impact the banking and bank card industries.

List of contents










Introduction
Cash Is Killing Us
Where Is the Rising Usage of Electronic Money Taking Us?
Replacing Cash With E-Money
Federal or Private Currencies
Federal Electronic Currency (FEDEC)
Benefits of a Federal Electronic Currency
Privacy in an Electronic Currency System
Practical Considerations about Electronic Currency
The Technical Components
How Federal E-Currency Might Impact the Banking and Bankcard Industries
Conclusion
Endnotes
Index


About the author










DAVID R. WARWICK is an investor, researcher, and writer living in Santa Rosa, CA. He holds an LL.B. and J.D. from Hastings College of the Law and has practiced plaintiff's personal injury law. He later turned his attention to real estate development, then to entrepreneurship in retail electronics, importing, and security hardware manufacturing. He has a patent pending for a means to make electronic bill payments via ATM and Internet terminals. Mr. Warwick is author of The Cash Free Society, an important article published in The Futurist in 1992, and of other writing for the National Council on Crime and Delinquency. He has also aired his views on National Public Radio and regional television.


Product details

Authors David R. Warwick, Warwick David R.
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 19.11.1998
 
EAN 9781567202397
ISBN 978-1-56720-239-7
Subjects Guides > Law, job, finance

USA, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Money & Monetary Policy, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Banks & Banking, Banking, United States of America, USA, Monetary Economics, Business: Finance, Investments and Banking

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