Judge Me By My Cover: The Toothfairy and the Future of Banking

Judge Me By My Cover: The Toothfairy and the Future of Banking

Banking everywhere - but are we going cashless too soon?
23 Minuten
Podcast
Podcaster
One Vision fintech podcast hosted by Theodora Lau, brings purposeful innovation to spotlight. It is where impact meets innovation, with founders, investors, industry players, and thought leaders

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vor 6 Jahren

Theo: If we were to go cashless, the tooth fairy would not be
able to give you money anymore.


Theo's Kiddo: Well, the tooth fairy could always put money in a
prepaid card.


The world is definitely ramping up to go cashless.


As technology continues to reduce friction, banking will become
more embedded in our day-to-day life. A bank as we know it might
look very different than what it does today – and we may no
longer need a physical branch to service most of our needs.
Recent market entries such as T-


Mobile Money illustrates this point: a telecom wireless provider
leveraging technology to enable consumers to conduct financial
transactions. But this is just the beginning.


In this episode of Judge me by my Cover, Theodora Lau and Arun
Krishnakumar talk to Brett King, an international best selling
author, futurist and the Founder and Chairman at Moven. Brett
shares his views on the future of banking, how China is leading
the world in Fintech with 22 Trillion of digital payments done vs
10+ Billion in the west, and what his next book is focused on. In
his book he writes,


“The bank account you have today will have long disappeared in
favor of something that’s a lot smarter and a lot better for your
day-to-day use of money, saving for the future and providing for
your family.”


However digitisation and going cashless may not be the green
shores we dream of. We may be becoming exclusionary in the name
of digital and the debate around cash has been heating up lately.
The city of Philadelphia and the state of New Jersey have
recently passed bills that


ban stores from going cashless, arguing that the concept
marginalize consumers who are unbanked and don’t have access to
credit, including low income and immigrants. Amazon just opened
its first Amazon Go store in New York City, accepting cash.


While banking is starting to be omnipresent, cash may linger in
its current state for longer than we think. Listen in for more
insights.


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