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Urging treasury to safeguard cash in payments system

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Cash payment security

Australians have the opportunity to submit to the Treasury’s consultation on a new bill to regulate digital payments in the payments system.

This is an opportunity to send a very strong message to the government: whatever you do to regulate new digital payments, you must also protect the only payment system that is 100 percent certain, reliable, and private—cash!

Treasury’s consultation on the exposure draft legislation for proposed reforms to the Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998 runs until November 1, 2023.

The consultation page explains:

“Following consultation in June 2023, the government is updating the Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998 to ensure regulators and the government can address new risks related to payments as the provision of payments evolves and increases in complexity.”

As of yet, the Australian Citizens Party has no opinion on the specific proposed reforms but urges Australians to seize on this opportunity to send a message to the government to protect cash.

The government repeatedly states it has no plans to get rid of cash, but it is allowing the banks to effectively force Australians to go cashless by making it harder and harder to access and use cash, which makes a loud message important.

 

The banks:

  • impose arbitrary limits on cash withdrawals at branches that have nothing to do with money-laundering regulator AUSTRAC’s $10,000 disclosure threshold;
  • interrogate anyone who wants to withdraw their own money—which the banks claim is to protect customers from scams, but it’s also convenient for the banks, and they take it way too far;
  • close branches and rip out ATMs to make it much harder for consumers and small businesses to source cash and bank their takings, and force consumers to use private ATMs that charge high fees;
  • incentivize businesses to go cashless to reduce the options for consumers to spend cash.

 

If the government doesn’t intervene to stop the banks from going down this path, Australians can look forward to a future in which any natural disaster or power failure will bring all commerce to a halt—possibly for days—until the infrastructure is fixed.

Families will not be able to buy food, water, fuel, or any other necessities.

Starving, desperate people will huddle around and say, “Remember when we had cash and we could still buy stuff when the power failed? ”

Bank executives who are bedazzled by technology can shift their banking business model to 100 percent digital. They can enable the banks to extract more profits from their customers by trapping them inside the bank, tracking and tracing every transaction, monetizing the data, and taking a cut of every single transaction.

To achieve their digital dystopia, the banks and the Australian Banking Association (ABA) are using dodgy claims and data to paint a false picture of Australian commerce.

For example, they claim check use has plummeted, but that’s only as a percentage—the absolute number of checks written per month has held steady at around 2 million for 15 years.

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Justin Lavadia is a content producer and editor at Public Spectrum with a diverse writing background spanning various niches and formats. With a wealth of experience, he brings clarity and concise communication to digital content. His expertise lies in crafting engaging content and delivering impactful narratives that resonate with readers.

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