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Only High Class Middle Income Familees use e-wallet...lower adoption in low ses poor incum group de woh....

k1976

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://sg.yahoo.com/news/43-of-sin...er-physical-cards-tokens-study-040012985.html


More than half of those in households earning over $6,000 a month (59 per cent) used e-wallets or mobile apps for fare payment, rising to 70 per cent for those with an income over $12,000.

Conversely, only 40 per cent of respondents with a household income of $3,000 or less use e-wallets or mobile apps on public transport.

Individuals in this income group who did not use these methods also heavily favoured physical cards or tokens, at an overwhelming 82 per cent


**Moi admit moi is low ses low incum...I du. Use E-wallet
 

k1976

Alfrescian
Loyal

Why physical cards still reign among the seniors?​

Associate Professor Raymond Ong, from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the National University of Singapore (NUS), pointed out that commuters, particularly those in their 50s, still prefer using physical cards such as EZ-link or tokens due to deeply ingrained behavioural experiences.

He said that despite their familiarity with the internet and mobile apps, this preference stems from decades of habit, rather than a lack of technological awareness.

"They are well-versed with perhaps at least knowing what the internet is and what mobile apps are, but they still prefer the token or physical card," Ong told Yahoo.

"The main reason is they are so used to it, that it is quite difficult for them to change behaviour. It is more like a behavioural preference than the convenience of a mobile app," Ong said.
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The appeal of physical cards remains strong for certain commuters in Singapore, despite the perceived convenience offered by digital payment methods such as e-wallets, a recent study commissioned by Yahoo Singapore and conducted by Milieu Insight has found.

https://www.mili.eu/sg/about

Before that, Gerald was a Commercial Director at GfK and Managing Director of Thailand at YouGov.

Before that, Stephen was Managing Director of Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia at YouGov.

https://www.politico.eu/article/gen-z-thinks-davos-is-good-actually/

The company, in partnership with YouGov, polled more than 6,000 people in the U.S., U.K., France, Germany and Switzerland, where the WEF annual meeting is held each January in the small, Alpine town of Davos, to find out what they think of the gathering of the global elite.
The event has long been criticized as little more than a winter getaway for the super-rich and powerful — opulent, out-of-touch and ultimately ineffective.
Yet according to the survey, a majority of people (54 percent) are optimistic about heavyweights in politics and business having the power to do good at Davos.



Do you get it now? :cool:
 
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