It’s strange. Aside from tax avoidance for smaller businesses, I do r quite get why they’d think cash is a ‘free’ payment method. There’s no such thing. You’re not paying merchant fees but what if the costs in devoting a staff member’s time to go to the bank to do the banking and the security risks (aside from staff pretending to be robbed to take the day’s takings for themselves.
a/ Maybe, but if it's a small business, say about 1m pa, I'm not trusting a staff to count the money, let alone bank it. That's less than 20k per week, 5k a day. Considering you can deposit 10k per day through ATMs, anything under this amount is easily handled. And 1m in cash in $100 bills or gold is suprisingly small
b/ If I'm committing tax avoidance, why would I let someone else count it and bank it, plus the amount banked is lower (obviously)
Cash is "free" for these businesses, and electronic payments are a massive headache. Have you ever tired to reconcile payments that come from personal banks accounts for business customers, where you do not know know their legal personal names. And every time you tell them to add the description the next payment, they put the product name, or my business name in the description, instead of invoice number.
The amount you declare is a business decision, It's just as easy to give a few customers my personal payid details and have them pay me directly unstead of to the business.
Go to any bakery and pay by payid, and it's not to a business named account, most of these small businesses, rightly or wrongly, use personal accounts to manage their business expenses.
Or better still, you are helping them commit tax avoidance by directly paying into their personal accounts. a few dollars here and there. Then they take away the sign to pay by payid, and accept cash only for the rest of the day.
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