Does accepting cash really save a business that much money? I've heard arguments in the past that it ends up being a negligible difference once you account for all costs of processing cash (someone has to take it to the bank, it can get stolen in a robbery, employees can skim, you have to count it, you need a safe, you need cash deliveries, etc).
I have no numbers, so it could be totally off-base, but it feels not-impossible that it costs a percentage or two to process all your cash anyway, so the difference between cash & credit cards isn't actually that big. It's just that the interchange fees show up as one big chunk whereas the cash processing is lots of little bites, or even accounting for things that didn't happen (like skimming).
I guess this only applies if you're legitimately reporting all your cash take, if the business itself is skimming for tax reasons then the savings on cash would be substantial.
>It's just that the interchange fees show up as one big chunk whereas the cash processing is lots of little bites, or even accounting for things that didn't happen (like skimming).
Not just skimming, but lost business for cash-only establishments is huge. The amount probably varies by type of business, but I sometimes go to a bar that's cash-only and I've seen so many people walk in, try to order, and walk out and never come back once they find out it's cash-only. Even groups of 15-20 people. That's a significant cost (in lost revenue) even if it doesn't directly show up as a line item.
Even I admit to choosing a different place from time to time I think "I could go to the cash only bar, but then I'd have to go to the ATM first or I could just go to the other place that doesn't require an extra trip to the ATM. I should probably just go to the ATM so I could have some cash on me anyways, but traffic is heavy or it's cold/rainy/dark/late."
I have no numbers, so it could be totally off-base, but it feels not-impossible that it costs a percentage or two to process all your cash anyway, so the difference between cash & credit cards isn't actually that big. It's just that the interchange fees show up as one big chunk whereas the cash processing is lots of little bites, or even accounting for things that didn't happen (like skimming).
I guess this only applies if you're legitimately reporting all your cash take, if the business itself is skimming for tax reasons then the savings on cash would be substantial.