Teslag said:
Same
I always laugh at people who use cash for most purchases. Congrats on being irresponsible and throwing money away.
Convenience Cards is what I call them.
What I don't understand is anyone who uses debit. Blows my mind.
Teslag said:
Same
I always laugh at people who use cash for most purchases. Congrats on being irresponsible and throwing money away.
Gilligan said:Teslag said:
Same
I always laugh at people who use cash for most purchases. Congrats on being irresponsible and throwing money away.
Convenience Cards is what I call them.
What I don't understand is anyone who uses debit. Blows my mind.
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:scoop12 said:
I don't have any problem with processor fees as they offer a valuable service and benefit to businesses. I do have a problem with the increase in interchange fees that you have zero negotiating power over which are used to pay for credit card rewards. The credit card companies get to offer rewards to customers and stick small business with the bill without any pushback. It's another one of the small cuts that are killing small business.
Do small businesses have to take credit cards?
rwv2055 said:Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:scoop12 said:
I don't have any problem with processor fees as they offer a valuable service and benefit to businesses. I do have a problem with the increase in interchange fees that you have zero negotiating power over which are used to pay for credit card rewards. The credit card companies get to offer rewards to customers and stick small business with the bill without any pushback. It's another one of the small cuts that are killing small business.
Do small businesses have to take credit cards?
If they want my business, they do.
Is it really "cash only"? I don't see too many people advocating that. It's mostly people like me who argue that we need to retain cash as an option.Pinochet said:rwv2055 said:Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:scoop12 said:
I don't have any problem with processor fees as they offer a valuable service and benefit to businesses. I do have a problem with the increase in interchange fees that you have zero negotiating power over which are used to pay for credit card rewards. The credit card companies get to offer rewards to customers and stick small business with the bill without any pushback. It's another one of the small cuts that are killing small business.
Do small businesses have to take credit cards?
If they want my business, they do.
This is the point all the "cash only" types miss from their positions well above the proletariat. We have a brick and mortar and a web presence and may collect less than 0.5% of our in-store purchases in cash. We obviously have nothing in cash online.
No. This is just a form of price controls, which never work.TheEternalOptimist said:
Hawley and Sanders are working on some bipartisan legislation to cap interest rates. 29% APR is ridiculous.
Perhaps one of a handful of things that can be agreed on.
Yeah, I agree with all of that. I just don't see anyone advocating for cash only....just people who don't want to lose it as an option.Pinochet said:
Yes, people who can't understand anyone who does money different than they do. They dont seem to understand why a credit card can be a preferable payment form for a seller. There are fees that we all like to ***** about, but the additional sales from the convenience factor outweigh that by orders of magnitude. My libertarian-esque view says the government needs to get the **** out of this issue, but the fact remains that credit cards are a necessity for almost any business.
FbgTxAg said:
I'd use my card less and pay cash more if I didn't effectively get the CCTransaction fee the business pays, back with each purchase.
Credit Cards aren't the problem. It's the processor vultures. Businesses have to be able to process the cards, and pay a fee for each. In essence, reward cards just give that to the cardholder. They still make money on interest.
But cash suffers - even though it's much better for businesses to be paid in cash.
I've used the rewards system for a long time - and got a few first-class rides across the pond. And I've also been the guy paying the CC transaction fees. Adjust prices accordingly, move on.
But in the end, this bill if passed would probably keep cash alive a bit longer.
Which is good, cuz when cash is gone, it's the next step in our demise.
reineraggie09 said:FbgTxAg said:
I'd use my card less and pay cash more if I didn't effectively get the CCTransaction fee the business pays, back with each purchase.
Credit Cards aren't the problem. It's the processor vultures. Businesses have to be able to process the cards, and pay a fee for each. In essence, reward cards just give that to the cardholder. They still make money on interest.
But cash suffers - even though it's much better for businesses to be paid in cash.
I've used the rewards system for a long time - and got a few first-class rides across the pond. And I've also been the guy paying the CC transaction fees. Adjust prices accordingly, move on.
But in the end, this bill if passed would probably keep cash alive a bit longer.
Which is good, cuz when cash is gone, it's the next step in our demise.
What I've never understood are the businesses that offer a 5% cash discount. Your credit card fees aren't that high.
Also, your business isn't going broke over credit card fees. If your profit margin is 2-3%, you have other problems. And I pay 10s of thousands of dollars annually in credit card fees.
This! Are people this obtuse? For some it could be a significantly higher discount. I feel like a fool for reporting our cash payments and I want the option to stop if they do not do something about progressive taxation.AGpops1923 said:reineraggie09 said:FbgTxAg said:
I'd use my card less and pay cash more if I didn't effectively get the CCTransaction fee the business pays, back with each purchase.
Credit Cards aren't the problem. It's the processor vultures. Businesses have to be able to process the cards, and pay a fee for each. In essence, reward cards just give that to the cardholder. They still make money on interest.
But cash suffers - even though it's much better for businesses to be paid in cash.
I've used the rewards system for a long time - and got a few first-class rides across the pond. And I've also been the guy paying the CC transaction fees. Adjust prices accordingly, move on.
But in the end, this bill if passed would probably keep cash alive a bit longer.
Which is good, cuz when cash is gone, it's the next step in our demise.
What I've never understood are the businesses that offer a 5% cash discount. Your credit card fees aren't that high.
Also, your business isn't going broke over credit card fees. If your profit margin is 2-3%, you have other problems. And I pay 10s of thousands of dollars annually in credit card fees.
I give 5% cash discount. And it's not because of the 2.7% fee I pay per transaction. Other benefits to persuading customers to pay in cash.
I am in court almost everyday against the federal government and my clients are criminals. The feds look really closely at their sources of income and regularly freeze their accounts. It would be a pretty bad look if they raided a clients house and found a receipt paying me in cash and I did not have the corresponding deposit into my IOLTA account along with a CTR filing.AGpops1923 said:
You are a fool.
Oh they do.hph6203 said:
Seems they should be looking closely.
Tom Fox said:I am in court almost everyday against the federal government and my clients are criminals. The feds look really closely at their sources of income and regularly freeze their accounts. It would be a pretty bad look if they raided a clients house and found a receipt paying me in cash and I did not have the corresponding deposit into my IOLTA account along with a CTR filing.AGpops1923 said:
You are a fool.
We will take in over a million in cash this year. It hurts to give the government 30% of that, but it is what it is. I keep hoping my honesty will be rewarded and they will lower our taxes down to at least 20% for the top earners.
Tom Fox said:
LoL I don't. I think our current progressive taxation system is theft. Everyone should pay the same rate. From the first dollar to the last. Whether cash, income, investments, everything. And that rate should never exceed 10%.
But cash at least allows small business owners willing to risk it, the ability to use it as a tax avoidance strategy.
To make sure you follow me: I am saying that cash allows you to CHEAT.
Pinochet said:Tom Fox said:
LoL I don't. I think our current progressive taxation system is theft. Everyone should pay the same rate. From the first dollar to the last. Whether cash, income, investments, everything. And that rate should never exceed 10%.
But cash at least allows small business owners willing to risk it, the ability to use it as a tax avoidance strategy.
To make sure you follow me: I am saying that cash allows you to CHEAT.
And if people like you, who advise criminals, didn't suggest that cheating is only a big deal if you get caught, the government wouldn't have the excuse of cash allows cheating and therefore we have to be able to track every digital dollar to make CBDC mandatory. Congrats, you're either a thief or tolerating thieves. You're the former prosecutor, right? That figures. Once a dishonest guy, always a dishonest guy. You give lawyers a bad name.
hph6203 said:
Everyone scatter. It's a fed.