We have done a fair amount
of travelling since returning to the states: Gull
Lake , Chicago ,
Pennsylvania (Greensburg ),
Beaver Island . The trips have all been fun and were
opportunities to see/spend time with good friends. Time spent with friends is
time well-spent: good food, preparing meals together, new recipes to share, new
wine discoveries and, this year, stories about the winter of the Polar Vortex (compared
to our mild but rainy winter in France ).
During our travels, I was
struck by the ways in which we pay for things – and the differences between
money/payments here and in France .
Obviously, the currencies
are different. France
is part of the European Union so currency is Euros. Euros are easier to use than
dollars as the sizes of the bills change based on the value. There is a small
note for five euros, a larger note for 10 €, the 20 € bill is bigger still and
the 50 € note is about three times the size of the five euro note. In addition
to differences in size, the bills are different colors. There are no one €
notes. There are coins in values from two € to one centime. (2 €, 1 €, 50
centimes, 20 centimes, 10 centimes, 5 centimes, 2 centimes and 1 centime.)
When we first moved to France , I
seemed to end a day carrying about five kilograms (ten pounds) of coins. It was
easier to get out a bill and take the change rather than work though the coins
to find exact change – though I was sure that I had it.
Credit cards are accepted
in most stores but European credit cards now have a security chip that is still
rare in American credit cards. The credit cards with a security chips require a
pin number much like our debit cards. Friends who came to visit last spring got
to Marseille, rented a car and started their trip to Vaison la Romaine only to
discover that the toll booths at the expressway exits require cash or European
credit cards with-the-security-chip. Luckily, they had come with a small amount
of euros and were able to exit the roadway after they dug the cash out of the
bag in the back of the car – much to the chagrin of the always impatient French
drivers in line behind them.
Checks are still popular in
France .
At the big grocery stores, I often see the cashier telling the customer the
total amount. The customer then tears out a check and hands the blank check to
the cashier. The big stores have machines that print all of the necessary
information on the check. The cashier gives the check back to the customer for
her/his review and then signature.
When Europeans rent our
apartment, they most often pay with a bank transfer called a RIB. (RelevĂ© d’IdentitĂ© Bancaire). When Americans
rent our apartment, they use PayPal.
Whether it’s cash, cowry
shells or credit card, the song title by Lefty Frizzell seems the appropriate way
to end this post: "If you’ve got the money, I’ve got the time".