Digital money is changing financial behaviour

2 mins read

Digital money is making financial behaviour faster, more frequent, and more abstract—making it harder for young people to understand and manage money effectively.

What has changed

Money is no longer physical—it is invisible.

This shift creates a fundamental challenge: → People act financially without fully understanding consequences.

  • Money is digital-first
    Payments happen instantly via apps and cards.

  • Spending is frictionless
    Online purchases and subscriptions reduce awareness

  • Debt feels less real
    Many young users do not perceive “Buy Now, Pay Later” as debt.

  • Consumption starts earlier
    Children engage with financial decisions at younger ages.


The behavioural impact

Reduced sense of money value

  • Increased impulsive spending

  • Lower awareness of long-term consequences

  • Higher financial stress and uncertainty

For example:

  • 86% of teenagers have purchased online in the past year  

  • Many young adults worry about their financial future

Why this matters for banks

Banks must adapt to a digital-first behavioral environment:

  • Make money visible again through insights

  • Provide real-time feedback on decisions

  • Help customers understand consequences

  • Build financial awareness early

Research

Research

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Conclusion.

Digital money has changed behavior—but education has not kept up.

Banks that bridge this gap:

  • Improve financial outcomes

  • Increase engagement

  • Build stronger customer relationships

See how Gimi turns transactions into learning experiences