Close X
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

More Canadians Choosing Credit Card, Mobile Payments Over Cash: Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Feb, 2016 01:21 PM
    TORONTO — Canadian consumers are more inclined to reach for their smartphones and credit cards over bills and coins to make purchases, according to a new study.
     
    Market and consumer information firm GfK conducted an online survey of 1,000 Canadians as part of a larger study on shopping behaviours.
     
    In 2015, only 25 per cent of Canadian transactions were in cash, a decline of two percentage points from 2014. Meanwhile, credit cards accounted for the majority of transactions at 42 per cent, unchanged from the previous year.
     
    "We also saw a number of years ago in this country a very concerted effort by the card companies to get people to start using their cards for smaller payments. That clearly has worked," said Stephen Popeil, vice-president of GfK Canada.
     
    "We're clearly seeing that the use of cash is getting less and less in this country. Is it ever going to disappear? I don't think so, because of the nature of certain economies that are out there. But clearly, what we are seeing now is every year fewer and fewer payments are being made with cash."
     
    Debit cards were at 28 per cent, followed by mobile device payments at three per cent. Each category saw marginal growth of a percentage point each compared to 2014.
     
    In the case of mobile payments, GfK found that they tend to skew to younger and higher-income Canadians, as well as among urban dwellers and those with a higher education. But the high-tech payment method is also catching on with boomers and those of the silent generation born between 1925 and 1945.
     
    "What we saw this year versus last year is a nice little increase in ... perception of these benefits," said Popeil. "More boomers and more older retired Canadians from the silent generation are now acknowledging that mobile payment systems are easier and faster and more efficient."
     
    Despite the convenience afforded by mobile payments, Popeil acknowledged the research revealed concerns over security among consumers.
     
    The survey found 53 per of Canadians agreed they were worried about their personal information when using a mobile payment app, and only 22 per cent agreed they were confident that their mobile device payments were 100 per cent secure.
     
    "We have to figure out as an industry how we're going to communicate safety and security. That's a challenge, in my mind, for the whole fin-tech industry," said Popeil.
     
    "In many cases, how do we convince people that divulging certain things about their financial state via these systems is safe and secure? Once we've cracked that nut we're going to see massive uptake on a lot of this.
     
    "It's got to be more than just biometrics, like you find Apple and some of the phones now with thumbprints. There's got to be some way to convince everyone that these systems are safe and secure."
     
    The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not a random sample and therefore are not necessarily representative of the whole population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Why, Why Why?' Funeral Held For Three Alberta Sisters Buried In Grain Truck

    'Why, Why Why?' Funeral Held For Three Alberta Sisters Buried In Grain Truck
    Eleven-year-old Jana Bott was the quietest of the three sisters, an artistic girl who painted sunsets, sewed her own nightgown, decorated cakes and went most places clutching a pet rabbit named Marbles.

    'Why, Why Why?' Funeral Held For Three Alberta Sisters Buried In Grain Truck

    Canada's Inflation Rate Falls To 1.0% In September On Lower Gasoline Prices

    Canada's Inflation Rate Falls To 1.0% In September On Lower Gasoline Prices
    The annual pace of inflation slowed in September due to lower gasoline  and other energy prices, but the cost of groceries, restaurant meals and many other things pushed higher.

    Canada's Inflation Rate Falls To 1.0% In September On Lower Gasoline Prices

    Investigators Believe Drywall Hammer May Have Been Used In Richard Oland Murder

    Investigators Believe Drywall Hammer May Have Been Used In Richard Oland Murder
    The lead investigator into the murder of Richard Oland says police suspect a drywall hammer or similar instrument was used to kill the Saint John businessman.

    Investigators Believe Drywall Hammer May Have Been Used In Richard Oland Murder

    5 Albertans Guilty Of Killing, Leaving 4 Trophy Bighorn Rams To Spoil

    5 Albertans Guilty Of Killing, Leaving 4 Trophy Bighorn Rams To Spoil
    HINTON, Alta. — Five Alberta men have been found guilty of illegally hunting, killing and leaving four trophy bighorn rams to spoil.

    5 Albertans Guilty Of Killing, Leaving 4 Trophy Bighorn Rams To Spoil

    B.C. Mom Asks Court To Change Terms Of Government-Led Review Of Child Abuse Case

    A judge should fix a "one-sided, less-than-objective" government review into the case of British Columbia social workers who granted unsupervised visits to a father who had sexually abused his four children, says a lawyer for their mother.

    B.C. Mom Asks Court To Change Terms Of Government-Led Review Of Child Abuse Case

    Premier Christy Clark Delivers Order To Save Emails After Blistering Privacy Report

    British Columbia Premier Christy Clark ordered her cabinet ministers and all political staff Friday to save their emails after a stinging report criticized the government's access to information practices.

    Premier Christy Clark Delivers Order To Save Emails After Blistering Privacy Report