Comment by benced
2 months ago
That's false. It's 66.7% in the US. Only Iceland, Luxembourg, Switzerland, and Norway are higher.
https://genderdata.worldbank.org/en/indicator/fin7-t-a?gende...
(also, you answered - incorrectly - only one of the questions that I brought up)
That doesn't include debit cards, most people don't want nor need credit cards. I can count on one hand the amount of times I have seen people use cash the past year, basically everyone uses cards.
We have VISA and Mastercard with debit, not credit, so it works everywhere.
Sure, but the question was specifically regarding credit cards, not debit cards. In which case, they would be correct in that penetration is appears lower for credit cards in the EU no?
Note, I am not suggesting that is a bad thing, I fail to see largely how its a bad think but perhaps I lack enough understanding to see why people not loading up on credit cards is a negative.
> Sure, but the question was specifically regarding credit cards, not debit cards. In which case, they would be correct in that penetration is appears lower for credit cards in the EU no?
Yes, but that's because credit cards aren't needed in the EU (you don't need to build credit, and you get the same protections on both). So it's useless to try to focus on credit cards in particular, it only makes sense to consider debit+credit.
1 reply →