ADVERTISEMENT

Japanese Don't Need Digital Currency as They Love Cash, BOJ Says

That love of cash is clear from the amount of notes and coins sloshing around in Japan. 

Japanese Don't Need Digital Currency as They Love Cash, BOJ Says
A Japanese national flag flies outside the Bank of Japan (BOJ) headquarters in Tokyo (Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Cash is still king in Japan, and that means that the central bank doesn’t see a need to mint a digital currency for now, according to the head of the FinTech Center at the Bank of Japan.

“We aren’t at the stage of considering issuing a digital currency because there is no demand,” Yuko Kawai, the head of the BOJ division, said in an interview last week. “To begin with, do we really need a digital currency in the nation where cashless living isn’t making much progress?”

Japanese Don't Need Digital Currency as They Love Cash, BOJ Says

Kawai speaks from experience -- since taking over the job about a year ago, she’s tried to stop using cash in her personal life. But while life is “much easier” without needing an ATM so often, there are many things that still require physical money. If you want to split the cost of dinner with friends, or pay for a taxi in rural Japan, she said, you need cash.

That love of cash is clear from the amount of notes and coins sloshing around in Japan - more than any other major economy. The value of physical currency in circulation was equivalent to 20 percent of Japan’s economy in 2016, the highest among major nations, according to a report by the Bank for International Settlements last year. Sweden had the lowest ratio at 1.4 percent - its central bank is considering issuing a digital currency.

Notes and Coins

Credit, debit cards and e-money were used for less than 20 percent of transactions in 2015, according to a Japan Credit Association report. And as cash is so widely used, there’s little incentive for people to switch.

“The biggest hurdle is that others aren’t feeling inconvenience so they don’t download an app,” Kawai, 53, said. “Cash has been in demand so far and it’s our mandate to make it available" even if it has costs for the bank.

The situation could change as the population shrinks further because there will be less demand for bank branches and ATMs, and younger generations are used to using cashless payment methods such as Line Pay or Amazon gift cards, Kawai said.

Even so, it’s hard for bitcoin to become a means of settlement now as its technology is under development, she said. In addition, bitcoin has become a commodity for speculative trading, Kawai said.

Coincheck Theft

The theft last week of nearly $500 million in cryptocurrency from Tokyo-based exchange Coincheck Inc. is likely to add to the BOJ’s caution on the subject. Although the company has promised to reimburse all losses, the incident adds to a long list of thefts at cryptocurrency exchanges and wallets, stretching back to the robbery of Tokyo-based Mt. Gox in 2014.

Kawai declined to comment about on Coincheck theft when asked about it on Monday.

Her comments on the BOJ’s thinking add to Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s remarks last year that the central bank doesn’t have any concrete plan to introduce its own digital currency and indicate little chances that this will change anytime soon.

One big risk from that stance is the use of fintech may advance in other nations, and if Japan fails to provide convenient services for foreign tourists, their spending may drop, Kawai said. “If we keep our status quo, consumer spending by foreigners will go down.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at tfujioka1@bloomberg.net, Masahiro Hidaka in Tokyo at mhidaka@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brett Miller at bmiller30@bloomberg.net, James Mayger, Reed Stevenson

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.