This post is either going to be a gentle reminder to people or it’s going to cause a bank run.
Surely I cannot be the only one who is thinking that keeping some cash on hand might not be a bad idea. I use debit cards for most of my I-don’t-care-about-privacy transactions, and I pretty much just use cash for guns and the like. I can’t envision too many scenarios where Im not going to be able to continue to pay for things in that manner….but…being a survivalist means taking nothing for granted. So, off to the bank for some cash to stuff in an envelope and bury in the bottom of the gun safe. Outta sight, outta mind…and outta Palmetto’s website.
If there’s a situation where bank cards aren’t being taken because the economy is tanking, power is out, and there’s bodies in the street……well….cash won’t really be terribly helpful at that point anyway. But, my neighbor across the street doesn’t have a point-of-sale card reader in his kitchen and if I want to conduct business with him, cash would be nice to have. When the bodies stack up at the curb, then we’ll switch to other currencies.
How much? For me, not a lot…most everything I need that can be bought with cash is already here. For you….well, thats up to you to decide. As an aside, I’m still keeping most of the money in the bank except for what I’m allocating to limit orders at my brokerage since everything is on sale. Banks are just one more collection point for crowds and sick people…and whatever funk is oozing on the keys of an ATM keypad would give you the heebiejeebies if you thought about it. So…cash on hand.
I wonder how many people are doing the same and if there’s going to be any…behaviours…by the banks to slow the exodus of cash that may-or-may-not be in the works as people start going into panic mode. Either way, always good to be ahead of that sort of thing, Anytime anyone tries to ration something the obvious thing happens – demand and price goes up. If you told people they were limited to withdrawls no larger than, say, a billion dollars in cash…people would still line up at the banks to pull out money even though none of them have a billion dollars. When we hear that there’s a line at the bank and they’re limiting cash the natural reaction is to get all of yours out of there. Bank runs are self-fulfilling prophecies.
Here’s an interesting flip side to this coin, though….because cash is a wonderful distribution method for spreading disease it might come to businesses refusing to take cash and going to plastic only. Hmmm. Do I pull out the cash and keep it on hand or do I keep it in the bank on the chance that I need it there to back my debit card because no one will take diseased cash? Decisions decisions.
Hurricane Katrina was a lesson in disaster response and preparedness that defined planning for the last fifteen years. This coronavirus looks like its going to be a graduate level course. Emergency management departments, programs, and strategies are going to be wildly changed after all this settles out. The health care industry, despite its institutional inertia, should be pretty interesting to watch change as well.