Bank Robberies Fall to Zero for First Time in Cashless Denmark
·
Holdups
are down from one in 2021 and a peak of 222 in 2002
·
Lenders
have removed cash from branches across Nordic country
Bank robberies are
becoming a thing of the past in cashless
Denmark as the Nordic country recorded its first year of zero holdups in 2022.
Criminals have found
it no longer pays off to walk into bank branches in search of a bag of crisp
notes, as falling cash use in society has pushed banks to trim costs by pulling
cash services from most branches.
In 2021, Denmark only
had one bank robbery, according to data from Finance Denmark, the
country’s largest industry group for lenders. That’s down from 222 just two
decades ago.
Danes increasingly
use cards and payments apps on
their smart-phones for transactions, causing cash withdrawals to drop by about
three-quarters over the last six years, according to central bank data. In
total, about 20 bank branches across Denmark have cash holdings, according to
Finance Denmark.
As cash disappeared
from banks, robbers started targeting ATMs, with such attacks peaking at 18 in
the year 2016. Those have also come down to zero amid better surveillance and
technical protection, the finance group said.