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Co-op moves to address North-South cashless divide

Co-op

The Co-op plans to help disadvantaged or isolated communities to avoid becoming “cash deserts”.

The Manchester-headquartered convenience retailer is to offer free ATMs in every store where possible. If it can’t do that it will offer free cashback services or Post Office counter withdrawals where customers are dependent on cash.

The Co-op said its commitments would counter High Street bank closures, removal of free ATMs and the rise of cashless retailing.

New research by the grocery chain into the spending habits of 16 million shoppers found a north-south divide in the use of cash, with many disadvantaged communities relying on notes and coins to budget during the cost-of-living crisis.

The Way We Pay report found that cash use had fallen from 65 per cent to 28 per cent since 2016. However, it remained as high as 44 per cent in many areas, particularly areas in Northern Ireland, the Northeast, Wales and Scotland, PA said.

These areas had also been hit hard by bank closures, poverty and high unemployment levels.

London topped the list of locations where contactless payments were most common, while English counties with low unemployment rates made up 80% of the areas least dependent on cash.

Those most likely to use cash, meanwhile, were in the lowest-income households, with a third of respondents whose annual income was lower than £20,000 finding cash easiest to budget.

Matt Hood, co-managing director of Co-op Food, said: “Insight and data within our latest report indicates that while contactless has become the preferred way for many to pay, cash still remains a key payment method that the public looks to for confidence and security.

“The clear north-south divide highlights the inequality issues that are still apparent in society today, despite the government’s levelling up agenda. By introducing this charter and making these commitments we can continue to protect and provide easy access to cash, particularly in those communities that rely on it most.”

Since 2018, the number of free-to-use ATMs in the UK has dropped by more than 12,000 – a reduction of almost a quarter – and nearly half of the UK’s bank branches have closed since 2015.

Co-op currently has around 2,300 free-to-use ATMs, alongside 230 Post Office counters, across its stores.

 

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