Brits prefer debit cards to cash for payments

By ANI
Friday, December 3, 2010

LONDON - For the first time, debit cards have overtaken cash to become the UK’s most popular payment method.

According to the Payments Council in UK, on 30 August, the amount of money people had spent on debit cards since the beginning of the year overtook the value of transactions paid for in cash for the first time at 272 billion pounds.

The value of purchases made using debit cards rose by 10 per cent during the third quarter of the year, compared with a year earlier, to 73.1 billion pounds, with an additional 1.6 million transactions carried out every day.

People also used their debit cards three times more often than they used their credit cards, with 1.7 billion debit card transactions carried out during the three months, compared with just 500 million credit and charge card ones.

“Cash is too cumbersome for many consumers these days - they prefer a card for anything more than the smallest transactions,” the Scotsman quoted Sandra Quinn, of the Payments Council, as saying.

“We now expect our debit cards to be accepted everywhere - in pubs and clubs, at the corner shop, online and on the high street. Having quickly supplanted cheques, then claimed the scalp of credit cards, they have now usurped cash’s throne too,” she added. (ANI)

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