Home » Manga » Doraemon » [Doraemon] It seems that checks will be abolished at the end of the 2026 fiscal year.

[Doraemon] It seems that checks will be abolished at the end of the 2026 fiscal year.

Hey, Doraemon. Checkbook, checkbook, issuance of checks, stock bank. You did it, huh? Tomorrow, hey, look, the checkbook! ~~~ Check? What’s that? Just by signing? If you write the necessary amount here and sign it, you can buy anything. That’s right. But that’s fine. Just one magazine is good enough; it’s a mystery. Well, checks are a way to write checks and go to the bank to convert it into money. It’s bright, but… I’ll eat. I’ll head to the bank. Convert to money. It seems like there are people who can talk about the continuation later. I’ll go and convert it to money. 84

1: Japan Otaku Reviews

I guess it would become a future credit card now…

3: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx18

>>1

Future installment payment…

2: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx11

A check that you only see in a blackjack game or in an American world.

4: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx7

>>2

You can also watch it in Golgo 13.

51: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>2

Huh…?

5: Japan Otaku Reviews

I owe a debt to my future self.

6: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx10

Will I be unable to bet any amount I like…?

12: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx9

>>6

Enter the amount you like…

Please use QuickPay…

13: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx16

>>12

Sorry, we do not handle this here…

7: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx14

For Nobita, he’s quite cautious.

8: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx21

Mom’s explanation is easy to understand…

9: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx6

I have the image of a wealthy character handing over an outrageous amount of money as payment when taking away the means of transportation from ordinary people in an emergency.

36: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>9

I’m worried that I rushed too much while writing that and I’m not sure if it properly meets the requirements for a check.

10: Japan Otaku Reviews

Why is it called a check when a stamp is smaller?

11: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx5

Because it was smaller than the “rice stamp” used in Japan during the Edo period.

Originally, the term “stamp” referred to a “piece of paper that serves as proof of receiving money.” Nowadays, when we think of “stamp,” we can only imagine “postage stamp,” but originally, a stamp only meant “proof of receiving money.”

The story goes back to the Edo period. Samurai were basically paid with “rice,” which they sold for money. When converting it to cash, the sold rice was generally sold in a form akin to an auction. The successful bidder was given a “rice stamp,” and by presenting this “rice stamp,” they could receive the amount of rice they bid for. Later, during the Meiji era, the system of the modern “check” was introduced from abroad. It is said that the size of the paper used at that time was slightly smaller than the “rice stamp,” which is why it came to be called a “check.”

14: Japan Otaku Reviews

How many digits can you write in a writing-type format?

19: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>14

In short, since it’s just a means to receive money on behalf of the person, I don’t think there is a theoretical limit.

Even in those days when a vast amount of data was circulating, there probably weren’t many instances where the number of digits was so large that it couldn’t be written down.

15: Japan Otaku Reviews

The author had the opportunity to handle a check.

I wonder if they used their confusion as material.

There are probably very few readers who get it, right?

It’s still the era of postage stamps for all gifts.

25: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>15

Manga artists are essentially self-employed, so during that era (the 70s and 80s), I think they had many opportunities to handle checks on a daily basis.

That being said, the accounting clerical work was tough (especially since it was a time when calculators were just becoming common), so it was probably mostly left to the accounting staff.

81: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx2

>>15

I met someone for the first time who doesn’t know the author of Doraemon.

16: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx15

Doraemon is lacking in explanations too much, isn’t he?

17: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx1

I need to write the amount on the check right now, but I have no pen, only a 100 yen coin and ink.

What should I do to write down the largest amount possible?

I remembered that quiz.

20: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx4

>>17

I wonder what they’ll do.

I wonder if they paint ink on the side of a 100 yen coin and roll it on paper to make 1111111…

18: Japan Otaku Reviews

Some wholesalers that accept card payments are popping up, and I’m a bit scared to choose accounts and suppliers based on the cashback rate for companies that pay hundreds of thousands or millions.

21: Japan Otaku Reviews

I wonder if people in the past commonly had current accounts.

32: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>21

If you are on the management side, it is generally essential.

Even small stores in shopping streets probably had at least one check-printing writer on hand.

48: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx2

>>32

That’s nice, isn’t it?

I got scolded while making a racket.

23: Japan Otaku Reviews

Does this tool have anything to do with the future?

31: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx1

>>23

A tool to use money that will be obtained in the future before actually having it.

38: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>31

In other words, if you buy government bonds with future money…

24: Japan Otaku Reviews

Because it cancels errors, it’s a kind check.

26: Japan Otaku Reviews

It seems that the beginning of the currently used banknotes was a certificate that indicated how much was deposited in the bank.

27: Japan Otaku Reviews

I didn’t know there was an accounting person!

28: Japan Otaku Reviews

Is a check okay?

Can’t do it either?

29: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx1

Because it was smaller than the “rice stamp” used in Japan during the Edo period.

In the first place, the term “stamp” has historically referred to a “piece of paper that serves as proof of money received.” Nowadays, when we think of “stamp,” we can only think of “postage stamp,” but originally, a stamp only meant “proof of money received.”

The story goes back to the Edo period. The salaries of samurai were basically paid in “rice,” which they sold for money. When converting to cash, the rice sold was publicly sold in a manner similar to today’s auctions. The successful bidder was given a “rice stamp,” and by taking the “rice stamp,” they could receive the amount of rice they successfully bid for. Then, during the Meiji period, the current system of “checks” from overseas was introduced. The paper size used at that time was slightly smaller than the “rice stamp,” which is why it came to be called a “check.”

33: Japan Otaku Reviews

In short, it’s because it’s a credit card… and on top of that, they come to collect immediately.

34: Japan Otaku Reviews

There are tools that resemble handwritten checkbooks, and the future world of Doraemon is more analog than I expected…

35: Japan Otaku Reviews

A check can be cashed without question, which makes it strong.

It’s a note that drops a rank… no, two ranks.

37: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>35

Unlike a check that can be cashed the same day, a promissory note allows both parties to decide the payment date, so there may be cases where it takes several months to receive the money.

39: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>35

I saw something in the news recently about it being abolished or something like that.

40: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx2

Paper checks and promissory notes are being abolished together.

41: Japan Otaku Reviews

Wasn’t the traveler’s checks that appeared in Golgo also abolished quite a long time ago?

45: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx1

>>41

It ended about 10 years ago in Japan.

42: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx2

The discrepancy between the cash we currently have, the money we’ve saved, the money that’s expected to come in, and non-cash assets has troubled humanity for thousands of years.

43: Japan Otaku Reviews

Checks might be outdated, but it seems there are still places that use promissory notes.

44: Japan Otaku Reviews

Are people who discount promissory notes or promissory note fraudsters never at a loss?

46: Japan Otaku Reviews

Is it okay because it remains electronically?

47: Japan Otaku Reviews

I remember when I was a child, I wondered where checks are authenticated to tell if they are real.

If you add a zero after writing the amount, it’s the strongest, right?!

62: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>47

A checkbook is issued by a financial institution, and each check has a different number which can be used for inquiries.

If the amounts of the paying side and the receiving side do not match upon inquiry, it will become a problem.

A newcomer who just started in accounting might accidentally make mistakes with the numbers and get scolded…

49: Japan Otaku Reviews

Naniwa Financial Road will finally become a story of the past…

50: Japan Otaku Reviews

https://news.livedoor.com/article/detail/28400556/

Oh, so it’s going to be completely abolished by 2026, huh?

53: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx2

It feels like the functionality of regular savings accounts has become so high that they have completely surpassed the necessity for current accounts.

The last bastion, the promissory note, has also been digitized, and its significance no longer exists.

54: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx3

I knew promissory notes would disappear, but I didn’t know checks would also go away.

It’s great because communication through paper is decreasing… Creatively, the impact of “please write your desired amount here” is amazing though.

55: Japan Otaku Reviews

Large corporations that use promissory notes are invariably terrible.

56: Japan Otaku Reviews

I often use this when ordering without the parts for Gunpla…

I thought that, but upon further consideration, it was a money order, not a check.

57: Japan Otaku Reviews

It’s still used quite a bit, but they’re going to abolish it.

58: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx3

There were even secret tools that wouldn’t be used even at that time, so it’s likely that there are nostalgic people among the developers.

59: Japan Otaku Reviews

If promissory notes and checks are abolished, will bookkeeping certification become simpler?

60: Japan Otaku Reviews

Will the account items disappear?

61: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx7

While saying just to stop at one magazine…

The wickedness of giving a book of unsigned checks.

64: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>61

If you think about it carefully, it’s really a careless move to be making with elementary school students.

It’s like handing over your credit card and password and then saying to use them with restrictions.

65: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx2

>>64

You’re really bad at making comparisons.

63: Japan Otaku Reviews

The problem with promissory note payments is that they are subject to stamp duty.

In short, if you make the full payment of 1 billion with a promissory note, you will need to pay an additional cost of 200,000 yen.

69: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>63

It’s a hassle that I have to attach a revenue stamp to receipts over 50,000… The stamp fee isn’t insignificant either…

66: Japan Otaku Reviews

I hated it when I got my bookkeeping Level 3 because I didn’t understand it at all, but will I not have to remember that?

67: Japan Otaku Reviews

In the future of Doraemon, the 20th-century boom happens frequently, right?

68: Japan Otaku Reviews

What happens if I use a check without having a bank balance?

71: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx1

>>68

I tried to cash out, but I was stopped at the bank due to insufficient balance.

Trust falls to the ground.

74: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>71

So if you’re using checks, you need to regularly check your checking account and put in money when it starts to get low.

70: Japan Otaku Reviews

Naturally, there is a limit to the number of digits.

72: Japan Otaku Reviews

In modern times, I occasionally hear stories of athletes receiving checks for prize money at foreign competitions.

73: Japan Otaku Reviews

It’s about the postal service, but I guess the fixed-amount money orders will disappear eventually.

75: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx1

I looked it up to see if rice stamps are that big, and they are big... With a brush, it inevitably has to be large…

I looked it up to see if rice stamps are that big, and they are big…

With a brush, it inevitably has to be large…

76: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx2

I just learned that samurai’s salaries were paid in rice.

Do we have to convert rice to money one by one?!

Well then, the merchants on the conversion side will hold immense power.

79: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>76

So, it’s a frustrating specification where the standard price fluctuates every year.

77: Japan Otaku Reviews

A promissory note can be converted to cash after how many days?

Is it that I don’t want to?

80: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>77

If the company goes bankrupt by the due date and I can’t cash it, it will lead to a dishonored bill…

78: Japan Otaku Reviews

Lend him about the amount of cash equivalent to a magazine.

82: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx3

It just looks like the intention is to encourage Nobita’s ruin by intentionally omitting the explanation of the thread image.

83: Japan Otaku ReviewsYeahx1

I like being handed blank checks without numbers by rich people.

86: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>83

That’s not their own handwriting, so it might get rejected at the bank.

89: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>86

If the signature or seal is the person’s own, isn’t that good?

90: Japan Otaku Reviews

>>86

Since a check itself is like a bundle of transactional credit, the handwriting is not very relevant as long as only the filled-out part is concerned.

In the case of handwritten text, it’s more troublesome if the messy handwriting is difficult to read.

84: Japan Otaku Reviews

When promissory notes disappear, the actual bankruptcy from two bounced notes may also disappear, so it might become less clear.

85: Japan Otaku Reviews

Transfer to the Swiss account.

87: Japan Otaku Reviews

I wondered why Mom’s explanation was included, and I realized this is a part for explaining to the readers.

88: Japan Otaku Reviews

Can I write any amount I like, like the national budget?

But checks can’t be corrected, right?

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