em500 1 day ago

Europe is clamping down on cash, with in some countries placing caps on cash transactions as low as €1000.

https://en.econostrum.info/europe-restricts-cash-paymentss-n...

https://www.europe-consommateurs.eu/en/shopping-internet/cas...

3
eru 5 hours ago

> Europe is clamping down on cash, with in some countries placing caps on cash transactions as low as €1000.

That cap is about as enforceable as a cap on bitcoin transactions. Ie only enforceable on law-abiding citizens.

frollogaston 15 hours ago

In the US, cash purchases became a lot less common during the pandemic for obvious reasons, and it never really bounced back. Businesses were hardly ever credit-card-only before, now it's not that uncommon, and cash-only ones are way less common than before. Maybe related, several areas raised their sales tax beyond 10%.

jeffhuys 23 hours ago

We also can't have >500EUR in our homes

pastage 23 hours ago

You are allowed to travel abroad with under 10 000 euros without declaring it. As far as I know we do not have the same problem with asset forfeit laws like the US. There are no laws limiting how much cash you can have at home and while travelling. Though if you hoard millions in gold that is discovered in a police raid I think your main concern will be why the raid happend.

em500 22 hours ago

In the EU, laws differ by country, so I wouldn't categorically declare that it's legal everywhere to have any amount of cash at home or traveling. From incidental local news reports here in the Netherlands, I suspect that if I were found during routine checks to be traveling with multiple-10k cash in my backpack or in my car, it would be seized and be treated as illicit until I prove otherwise.

Tijdreiziger 18 hours ago

Source?

ru552 17 hours ago

say what?