Comment by unwind
1 day ago
Larger stores in Sweden also use the coin system, even though as in the Netherlands it feels like use is declining in favor of just unlocked carts.
My favorite part of the system in larger stores is that to handle people not carrying cash (Sweden is pretty long-gone in this regard), you can usually go inside the store to get a free plastic token that fits the reader.
That always made me chuckle, since the entire point of the system is that you're supposed to be incentivized to return the cart to get your money back, so by replacing your money with a free plastic token that they hand out from a basket, they did .. something to the overall system design.
Still fun as an example of how the customer's overall experience is more important than the point of an entire security system, I think.
> That always made me chuckle, since the entire point of the system is that you're supposed to be incentivized to return the cart to get your money back
It usually takes more time to go inside the store, find an employee who is available to get that plastic chip, go back outside to pick your cart and back to the store than it is to just return the cart so you can get your coin/chip back.
The point is not to stop theft, it is just to incentivize people to put back the cart where it belongs instead of leaving it in the middle of the parking lot.
Anyways, personally, I 3D printed a fake chip that can be removed without reattaching the cart and have it on my keychain. I find it more convenient, and hacking the system is fun. I return the cart anyways.
> Larger stores in Sweden also use the coin system, even though as in the Netherlands it feels like use is declining in favor of just unlocked carts.
The coins are so that people put them back in their designated storage area, not to prevent theft. A significant fraction of the population are lazy asshole who tend to leave carts next to where their car was parked instead of walking the 10-20 meters it take to return them.
It's not always out of laziness: many times I see moms buckle up their young kids in the car, unload the groceries from the cart, and then be nervous about leaving their kids in order to return the cart. A lot of them will try to park next to the cart return, but that's not always possible.
That is a silly excuse and I say this as a dad. If you don't want to leave the kids for 30 seconds, you return the cart with them.
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This is even less than statistically insignificant.
Every single person that doesn't return their cart does so out of laziness. Besides just being an asshole, the cart will take a potential parking spot that someone else later needs to move to free up, and worst of all the wind could blow the cart into someone elses car.
Nobody is gonna kidnap her kids as she walks the cart back in less than a minute. It is simply her being a lazy asshole.
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Right, getting your quarter back is enough incentive to return a cart. If you were just planning on stealing a free cart, now it only costs a quarter.
Otherwise known as Shopping Cart Theory
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shopping_cart_theory
As a french living in the Netherlands, the first time I saw this behavior was in the US (SF and LA), it just never happens here, or very marginally.
I have definitely seen it in Europe. France, Spain, Italy and even Switzerland.
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Germany is a cash country and the 1 EUR thing is quite popular. However, it is more common these days that people use specially crafted tools on their keyring to unlock the carts [0]. Before that it was plastic coins because the locks had drawers. The plastic chips are actually popular just because you cannot pay with them and this will not fail to have one the next time shopping. If hacking is more convenient than the real system, it will become mainstream.
[0] https://www.amazon.de/Caianwin-Shopping-Trolley-Stainless-Re...
You probably don't want to go get a plastic coin inside each time you get to the shop, so getting yours back is still more convenient.
> That always made me chuckle, since the entire point of the system is that you're supposed to be incentivized to return the cart to get your money back
I always kinda doubted that part, or at least its effectiveness. Iirc a 50 eurocent coin will unlock most trolleys, which is pretty cheap for a whole ass trolley.
And sure enough, there's a lot of elderly people that just have a shopping trolley in their yard or something. This morning I found one randomly in our bike shed.
> which is pretty cheap for a whole ass trolley.
It's not an incentive to "not steal the trolley", it's an incentive to put it back in its place for people who were already not planning on stealing one.
This way the store and the customers don't have to deal with trolleys strewn around everywhere and blocking parking spaces, among other advantages.
I think when they removed the coins during Covid they just noticed that most people were already well-behaved enough to return the carts to their places, so the incentive is just not needed anymore. Actually in Belgium, Colruyt had never had coins for their carts and it just works.
> it's an incentive to put it back in its place for people who were already not planning on stealing one.
It’s also an incentive for anyone else.
If I put the coin in and then leave the cart in the lot anyways, someone who wanders by is also incentivized to grab it and put it back, as they would get a free coin.
The system is actually somewhat elegant, if you return the cart you pay nothing and if you don’t you pay a small fine to whoever does.
In the United States, carts are free. There is a stereotype that homeless people have shopping carts in which they keep their things.
There's no particular need to change this, because one person can only use so many shopping carts. If you maintain the price at "free", demand saturates and people stop stealing carts.
It's common for people to return carts to a designated area, and it's also not rare for people to just leave the carts somewhere convenient for them. Store employees periodically go around and move the carts back to the place where you expect to pick them up.
Costco is an interesting hybrid case. They make it easy to return the carts "correctly" by providing little depots scattered throughout their enormous parking lot. Realistically, the parking lot is so large that very few people would be willing to return a cart to the front of the store, where you get the cart from if you're going shopping.
However, people also aren't going to pick up carts from those depots deep within the parking lot and wheel them over to the store. So Costco employees still have to make rounds of the parking lot and move carts that have been left there to their correct location at the front of the store. But for Costco, you're supposed to leave the cart in the parking lot, but only in certain locations.
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This brought back a memory of living in Byron Bay Australia in 1999 - there was a person who’s full time job was driving around town with a trailer, collecting shopping trolleys and returning them to the Woolworths supermarket.
I’d never seen that in the uk - but maybe that town was the sweet spot in size where it was small enough that you could actually get home with a trolley (and it was nice and flat), and maybe the number of visitors passing through meant rules got broken more - though the trolleys were more in the suburban areas than just where the hostels were.
I still see that in our town except he drives around maybe once a year. It just isn't a problem here. Even with unlocked carts now.
The coin isn’t supposed to stop you from stealing the whole cart, it’s supposed to stop you from abandoning the cart in the parking lot.
The plastic coin is the only coin in my wallet I won't accidentally spend. Ironically while the replacement is free in theory that single plastic holds _higher_ value to me than a regular coin it replaced.
That's what's always puzzled me as well. There are keychains with such a "coin" magnetically attached, and I've always thought "if I lose a euro, I've lost a euro. If I lose this token, I'll have to buy a whole other keychain!"
Why would I buy something I really don't want to lose to replace something I kinda don't want to lose?
Most places in north Sweden has stopped locking the carts. Sadly some youth took all carts and filled the car parking lot with them. And made some tiktok post about it. So it wont take long until the carts all get a lock again.