For more than a decade, predictions of a cashless future have been delivered with confidence. Digital wallets scale. Mobile payments expand. Central banks explore digital currencies. The trajectory appears obvious.
Yet global currency data tells a more nuanced story.
According to analysis by De La Rue of 46 central bank reports, banknotes in circulation increased globally between 2019 and 2023, with 96 of 98 issuing authorities reporting growth in cash volumes during that period. Even the Federal Reserve System continues to report year-on-year increases in currency in circulation, albeit at moderated growth rates post-pandemic.
Digital payments are expanding rapidly. Cash is not disappearing. The issue is not technological progress. It is a systemic function.
Cash as infrastructure
Cash remains the only payment instrument that:
- Requires no electricity
- Requires no telecommunications network
- Requires no third-party processor
- Settles instantly and irrevocably
In fragile or uneven infrastructure environments, cash operates as an offline resilience layer. When digital rails experience outages, cyber incidents, liquidity constraints, or regulatory freezes, physical currency functions as fallback infrastructure.
A payment ecosystem without a physical layer is structurally brittle. Central banks recognise this. The role of currency in circulation remains integral to monetary stability and public confidence.
Cash as cultural artifact
Money is not purely transactional. It is symbolic.
Physical currency carries national imagery, historical identity, and sovereign authority. It represents a direct liability of the central bank to citizens. Digital balances, by contrast, are mediated through financial institutions and infrastructure providers.
In societies with variable institutional trust, tangible currency provides psychological assurance that abstract digital balances cannot fully replicate.
Anthropologically, money operates within systems of belief and habit. The persistence of cash reflects not resistance to technology, but embedded trust structures.
The inclusion question
According to the World Bank’s Global Findex Database, approximately 1.4 billion adults globally remain unbanked. In many emerging economies, informal sector participation remains substantial, and digital transaction penetration, while improving, is uneven.
Even in highly digitized environments such as the United Kingdom, cash remains in circulation at significant absolute levels. Reports from firms such as G4S and Brink’s highlight that substantial populations would struggle in a fully cashless system.
Cash functions as the lowest-friction transactional instrument for populations with limited documentation, digital literacy, or institutional access.
Hybridisation, not elimination
The more sophisticated framing is not “cash versus digital,” but ecosystem hybridisation.
Electronic payment volumes continue to grow significantly in markets such as Nigeria, while currency in circulation also trends upward over time according to data published by the Central Bank of Nigeria. These trends are not mutually exclusive. They reflect layered usage patterns.
- Digital rails dominate convenience and speed.
- Cash dominates universality and resilience.
The objective of modern financial policy should not be eradication of cash, but optimisation of its role within a digitally expanding architecture.
Conclusion: From default medium to strategic backbone
Cash is unlikely to remain the dominant payment method in percentage terms in advanced digital economies. However, it remains central to:
- Crisis resilience
- Financial inclusion
- Sovereign monetary architecture
- Public trust stabilisation
The future is not binary. It is hybrid.
Cash may no longer be the sole king. But it remains a foundational pillar of monetary systems — particularly in cash-dominant and trust-fragile economies. Eliminating it entirely would not represent modernisation. It would represent risk concentration. And mature systems avoid concentrated fragility.
EMEKA JACK NZERIBE
Emeka is a financial infrastructure and operations executive with over 20 years’ experience designing and managing regulated cash systems in Nigeria. As national head of cash management at Bankers Warehouse Limited, he oversees daily liquidity operations exceeding ₦100 billion and collaborates closely with the Central Bank of Nigeria on compliance and outsourcing frameworks. His work spans multi-state operations, ERP-backed systems, and large-scale facility commissioning, with a focus on operational resilience, efficiency, and financial infrastructure modernisation. He can be contacted at comment@businessamlive.com
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