Study: Cash brings more to the economy than it costs

A research team has found that cash creates economic value nearly three times higher than the costs it generates.

In Germany the costs of cash amount to 0.45 percent of gross domestic product. This equals around 20 billion euros. Revenues of the Bundesbank and the European Central Bank cover less than half of these costs.

Julia Pitters of the International University of Applied Sciences Vienna and Franz Seitz of OTH Amberg-Weiden examined the benefits of cash together with other researchers. The result is available exclusively to Handelsblatt.

The economic value created by coins and banknotes clearly exceeds the costs. Two aspects contribute several billion euros to gross domestic product.

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The Argentine government gathered funds to cover a US$4.2 billion maturity on July 9 at an average cost of 6.7%.

The latest Banco de España study on payment habits shows Spaniards carry an average of 45 euros in cash, half the 70 to 100 euros recommended by the central bank for crises like last year's blackout. The bank emphasizes cash's independence from technological infrastructure failures.

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A new report shows that every dollar spent on parks and recreation generates three dollars in annual economic benefits for U.S. communities. The findings come from the Trust for Public Land and emphasize health, social and climate advantages as well.

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Sebastián Waisgold explained that with a stable dollar and falling rates Argentine savers are seeking alternatives to protect purchasing power against inflation.

German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) detailed specific savings targets for the 2027 federal budget at a press conference in Berlin. The measures aim to close a 111 billion euro financing gap. The largest cuts target pensions at four billion euros.

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