No Cash On Premises


NO CASH ON PREMISES

I didn’t know that some businesses still have that sign on the door. I saw one yesterday. It looked like a showroom for car parts, not a store or drugstore robbers could hold up with guns, and tell cashiers to empty the till.

No cash on premises. I found it strange because we were discouraged from using cash money, as one blues singer called it. He sang about it because money is physical. You can touch it, count it and stack it. Kids call it racks. That would be stacks and stacks of money I guess. Now, let’s look at a hypothetical situation. A robber drops by for an unofficial visit. He is greeted by the sign: NO CASH ON PREMISES. Will he shrug and try next door? I don’t think so. He will probably tell them to remove the sign, because he and his ilk have a new place of business. Which is? The internet.

You might be wrong. How? Maybe the sign is for potential customers who have bulging wallets because of $20 and $50 denominations. Such customers will need change, if they paid in cash. Canada and the U.S. are immigrant-based countries. Therefore, they have many people that are used to paying cash, where they come from. Remember that when you travel abroad. Hotels, rental car companies and restaurants take credit and debit cards. Small businesses in rural areas, might not.

Nonqaba waka Msimang

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