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Retail Circuits and Instruments: Main Trends

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Retail Circuits and Instruments: Main Trends Reforming Payment and Security Settlement Systems World Bank Federal Reserve Board Washington, D.C. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Retail Circuits and Instruments: Main Trends


1
Retail Circuits and Instruments Main Trends
  • Reforming Payment and Security
  • Settlement Systems
  • World Bank Federal Reserve Board
  • Washington, D.C.
  • November 4, 2003
  • Stuart E. Weiner
  • Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

2
Introduction
  • Payments systems worldwide are experiencing
    rapid, unprecedented change
  • Key driving forces are evolving end-user needs,
    technological advances, network integration,
    increased cross-border payments
  • As retail payments systems develop and evolve,
    how are the needs of end-users best met?

3
Terminology
  • Retail versus wholesale
  • Consumer retail payments
  • Merchants
  • Billers
  • Business, government retail payments

4
Key Points
  • To be successful, consumer retail payments
    instruments and systems must meet three criteria
  • Safety
  • Efficiency
  • Accessibility
  • Consumer/merchant/biller acceptance, in turn,
    will help payments instruments and systems
    achieve necessary critical mass

5
Presentation Structure
  • Payments mix across countries
  • Consumer/merchant/biller needs and preferences
  • Critical mass
  • Case studies
  • Business needs
  • Closing remarks

6
PaymentsCross-Country Snapshot2001
7
Payments Cross-Country Trends1997, 2001
8
Payments U.S. ACH Growth from New Sources 2002
2003
9
Consumer/Merchant/Biller Needs and Preferences
  • Despite strikingly different retail payments
    mixes across countries, all successful
    instruments and systems meet three critical
    criteria safety, efficiency, accessibility
  • There will often be tradeoffs among these three
    characteristics
  • Distinction between instruments and systems

10
Safety
  • Retail payments instruments must be perceived by
    consumers, merchants, and billers to be safe and
    reliable
  • Payments providers (banks, nonbanks, networks,
    processors) thus have a strong incentive to
    provide this safety
  • Providers may not, however, have an equally
    strong incentive to provide this level of safety
    at the macro level
  • Systemic and operational risk issues can arise

11
Efficiency
  • Consumers, merchants, and billers want payments
    methods that are low-cost and convenient
  • Providers will consequently have an incentive to
    operate as efficiently as possible
  • Economies of scale and network economies (a
    payments mechanism takes on more value to
    existing users as more users elect to
    participate) may lead to consolidation and
    concentration among providers

12
Timeline of Regional ATM and Debit Card
Networks1972-2002
 
13
Accessibility
  • Providers have an incentive to provide broad
    access
  • But access need not be universal to be profitable
    for providers
  • Two levels of access
  • Front-line access by consumers, merchants,
    billers
  • Infrastructure access by providers, making the
    first level of access possible

14
U.S. Consumer Payments Choices Research Results
  • Consumers are more likely to use electronic forms
    of payment
  • the younger and more educated they are, and the
    greater income they have
  • the more they use new technologies or computers
  • Payment choice depends on characteristics of the
    transaction, including transaction value,
    physical characteristics of the point of sale,
    and a bills frequency and value variability

15
Critical Mass
  • A successful payments instrument must reach a
    critical mass of users
  • To reach critical mass, must have consumer,
    merchant, biller acceptance
  • Also, providers must ultimately find it
    profitable to participate

16
Critical Mass (cont.)
  • Reaching critical mass is important for two
    reasons
  • Allows merchants, billers, and providers to cover
    fixed costs
  • Allows network economies to be realized
    (overcoming the chicken versus egg problem)
  • Private versus public provision
  • Competitive-network model versus regulated-
    monopoly model

17
U.S. Case Studies
  • The three criteria (safety, efficiency, and
    accessibility) and critical mass
  • Have successfully been met by credit cards, debit
    cards, and ACH
  • Have unsuccessfully been met by digital cash
  • Have met resistance but are attempting to take
    hold in the P2P and EBPP markets

18
Business Payments Needs
  • Same three criteria safety, efficiency,
    accessibility
  • Two key efficiency considerations
  • Internal technology integration (compatibility
    with existing systems, i.e., straight-through
    processing)
  • Common standards, interoperability across firms
  • Same need for critical mass
  • Need to make business case

19
U.S. Business Payments Study
  • Federal Reserve study undertaken in
  • 2001-2002
  • Interviewed representatives of roughly fifty
    organizations, including corporate end users,
    technology firms, banks, and private-sector
    providers
  • Sought views on longer-term payments system
    developments

20
U.S. Business Payments Study (cont.)
  • Corporations accounts payable, accounts
    receivable, payments, and reconcilement systems
    continue to be less integrated than necessary for
    seamless handling of invoice and electronic
    payments information.
  • The existence of multiple payment-message
    formats, such as the formats for ACH, wire
    transfers, and other electronic payments,
    increases the cost and complexity of payments
    processing.

21
Closing Remarks
  • Payments instruments and systems are undergoing
    dramatic, even profound, change
  • Meeting the needs of end-users will at times be
    challenging, but those end-users will go a long
    way in determining for themselves what will be
    successful and what will not
  • Safety, efficiency, accessibility, and critical
    mass will be key elements of success

22
References
  • BIS, Statistics on Payment and Settlement
    Systems in Selected Countries, 2003
  • Bradford-Davies-Weiner, Nonbanks in the Payments
    System, 2003.
  • Federal Reserve Board, The Future of Retail
    Electronic Payments Systems, 2002
  • Hayashi-Klee, Technology Adoption and Consumer
    Payments, 2003.
  • Hayashi-Sullivan-Weiner, A Guide to the ATM and
    Debit Card Industry, 2003.
  • Hoenig, Payments and Settlement Systems, BAI
    Money Transfer Conference, 2000.
  • Stavins, Effect of Consumer Characteristics on
    the Use of Payments Instruments, 2001.

23
Contact Information
  • stuart.e.weiner_at_kc.frb.org
  • Stuart E. Weiner
  • Payments System Research
  • Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
  • 925 Grand Blvd.
  • Kansas City, Missouri 64198 USA
  • 816.881.2201
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