DP19752 Cash or Card? A Structural Model of Payment Choices
We use a large granular dataset to analyze the households’ choice between cash and card payments. Empirically, both the size of the transaction and the amount of cash on hand emerge as significant covariates of the payment choice. We unveil a novel interaction between these two variables: the critical size for a card purchase depends on the amount of cash on hand. We present a tractable model of payment choices, featuring non-universal acceptance of cards by merchants, and a random expenditure flow. The model generates a precautionary motive for holding a cash buffer: cards are used to avoid “running out of cash”, accounting for the interaction discussed before. We employ a calibrated version of the model to quantify the benefits of card ownership, the welfare costs of imperfect card acceptance by merchants, and to identify conditions under which a cashless economy emerges.