Feeling isolated? You're not alone.
Join 20,000+ people who understand exactly how your day went. Whether you're newly diagnosed, self-identified, or supporting someone you love – this is a space where you don't have to explain yourself.
Join the Conversation → It's free, anonymous, and supportive.
As a member, you'll get:
You've found your people. Create your free account
Although this is true to a degree, having a legal definition of "money" and a legal framework surrounding it makes a big difference.No system of money works outside of just a societal belief that it does. Same goes with all rules, laws, etc. Belief is the ultimate (and only true) enforcement of anything "working."
Australia is different. Many situations have popped up in recent decades where businesses try to refuse cash and our government steps in and restates the laws loudly and clearly so that everyone understands."As it stands, businesses throughout the UK are free to choose what form of payment they accept.
There's no Bank of England rules or laws governing what they have to accept - that's why, since the pandemic, some cafes, restaurants and retailers no longer take physical cash whatsoever, they're not obliged to.
We have laws around that too and businesses can refuse payments made in such a way as to be "vexatious". In other words they don't have to accept hundreds of dollars worth of 5 cent coins. Or, they can accept the payment but charge the payer for the time it takes to count said coins.Seems to me some time back I heard about a defendant who lost a lawsuit and chose to pay the plaintiff in change. Awkward....with a hefty amount of money due the plaintiff.