About 84% of the United States’ adult population carry a credit card, or roughly 191 million American consumers, according to the research company Experion. That shouldn’t be a surprise to today’s restaurateurs, who’ve seen the use of cash be challenged pointedly in recent years by the surge in digital ordering.
No wonder the expense of accepting plastic has soared into one of operators’ biggest cost items, third only to labor and food.
How did the industry get here? When did the modern credit card find its way into the business, and how did playing with plastic become so prevalent?
This week’s edition of Restaurant Rewind, a podcast that looks back at the roots of today’s restaurant issues, aims to answer those questions. Let’s just say you can thank or blame a pair of 1940s men for sparking the industry’s dependence on credit and charge cards.
Join us as we trace the evolution of the co-dependency between restaurants and charge-card networks.
Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.