According to research by the Bank of England, the risk of spreading Covid-19 through using banknotes is low. The study suggests that the aversion to using cash during the pandemic is unnecessary.
The central bank considered a possible worst-case scenario of an infected person coughing or sneezing onto a note and found that the level of virus on the surface began to drop rapidly after an hour. It had declined to 5% or less after six hours.
The study found that the chances of such direct contamination occurring is relatively low as cash is typically stored firmly in tills or wallets. An infected person touching notes would result in far lower levels of the virus.
ALSO READ| Covid-19 Virus May Survive For 28 Days On Smartphones And Banknotes: Study
Even so, the pandemic is likely to result in lasting shifts in consumer behavior. As well as growing adoption of online shopping as people stayed home, concerns about the spread of the virus has prompted U.K. stores and consumers to increasingly prefer contactless forms of payment.
The report found:
- 42% of people as of July had visited a shop that did not accept cash in the previous six months, compared to 15% in January.
- 71% of respondents were using less cash compared with before the pandemic
- The volume of ATM withdrawals was around 60% lower at the height of U.K. restrictions in late March than a year earlier. It was still 40% lower in the second week of October
- At the same time, the value of cash in circulation has risen as people choose to hold more as a response to uncertainty
ALSO READ| Over 100 Scientists Join Hands With UN To Bust COVID-19 Vaccine Myths
“A few hours after infection, even at high doses, the levels and associated risk of infection appear low,” the report said.
“Further, the survival of virus on banknotes is no greater — indeed appears potentially less — than on reference surfaces representative of the many surfaces that people may come into contact with in their routine life.”