DocumentCode
1290982
Title
Legal implications of a cashless society
Author
Fischer, L.Richard
Author_Institution
Morrison, Foerster, Holloway, Clinton & Clark San Francisco, California
Volume
6
Issue
12
fYear
1973
Firstpage
21
Lastpage
26
Abstract
The movement toward a cashless society is by no means a new phenomenon. The introduction, in the 1860´s, of checks into the monetary system of the United States initiated the transformation of the American monetary system from a “cash-based” community to a cashless society. In fact, it has been estimated recently that over 90% of the total dollar volume of payments made in the United States are made by check.1 Nevertheless, checks, which require multiple handling by banks, are inherently inefficient payment instruments. This inefficiency, combined with the seven percent annual increase in volume of checks processed in the United States,2 threatens the fundamental operations of our payments system. While recent operational developments, such as the introduction of magnetic ink character recognition techniques, provide short-term solutions, there is some question whether the present check-processing system can be sustained in an operationally sound condition beyond the present decade.
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9162
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MC.1973.6540214
Filename
6540214
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