Pandemic triggers decline in use of cash, Central Bank study finds

Research detects structural shift in use of cash since pandemic though it remains widely-used in Ireland and across Europe

An economic letter, published by the regulator, examined ATM withdrawals before, during and after the Covid-19 pandemic. Photograph: iStock
An economic letter, published by the regulator, examined ATM withdrawals before, during and after the Covid-19 pandemic. Photograph: iStock

The Covid pandemic may have triggered a permanent decline in the use of cash, a new study from the Central Bank indicates.

An economic letter, published by the regulator, examined ATM withdrawals before, during and after the Covid-19 pandemic. Before the outbreak, the average monthly value of ATM withdrawals was around €1.5 billion.

Following the imposition of a strict lockdown in mid-March 2020, ATM withdrawals declined sharply, before recovering, the study found. Monthly ATM withdrawals averaged €1.04 billion from June 2020 to June 2022, it found.

The value of ATM withdrawals in June 2022 was 7 per cent higher than in September 2021, “suggesting consumers are withdrawing larger amounts in response to inflationary increases”, it said.

READ SOME MORE

However ATM withdrawals have not recovered to pre-pandemic levels.

“The Covid-19 pandemic saw a partial shift from making payments with cash to undertaking them with cards and other means, which in part reflects a move to online shopping,” the study said.

It noted that point-of-sale payments made by debit cards in Ireland rose from €3.4 billion in February 2020 to €4.9 billion in the corresponding month of 2022.

“Many card payments are now contactless in nature, a feature that allows them to be used for small-value payments that were previously mainly the preserve of banknotes and coin,” it said, while noting cash remains a widely-used payment instrument in Ireland and throughout Europe.

The authors of the study conclude that “both the value and volume of ATM withdrawals in Ireland underwent a structural downward shift at the outset of the Covid-19 pandemic with a reduction in the mean of monthly withdrawals occurring”.

“Nevertheless, the analysis indicates that ATM cash withdrawals remained steady subsequently by value and by volume, but at a lower average monthly value than arose before the pandemic, speaking to cash’s unique attributes as a means of payment and a store of value and its consequent enduring appeal to the public,” they said.

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times