as made her life more expensive. And she isn’t alone: more than one in three Swedes are over the age of 55. Ola Nilsson, a spokesperson for the Swedish National Pensioners’ Organization, told the BBC in the same article that its 350,000 members aren’t necessarily against a cashless future. Instead, they want to ensure vulnerable individuals are catered for, that they can still put their money into the bank, and that changes aren’t brought in too swiftly. It seems Swedish politicians are begin...