TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a system for issuing customized credit and debit cards for use in transactions at selected vendors only, such as restaurants, airlines, hotels, certain stores, or so forth.
Abstract: Customized credit and debit cards for issuance by a person or main cardholder, the cards being limited to use in transactions at selected vendors only. Thus, for example, a parent or corporation can issue a customized card to a person or group, wherein the card is only valid for use at restaurants, airlines, hotels, certain stores, or so forth.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the use of cash and five non-cash payment instruments in 14 developed countries over 1987-1993 and determined why some payment instruments are used more intensively than others, especially electronic versus paper-based payments.
Abstract: The social cost of a payment system comprises between 1% to 1.5% of GDP. This cost can be reduced if non-cash payments shift from paper to electronics since the cost of an electronic payment is estimated to be from one-third to one-half that of a paper-based transaction. We examine the use of cash and five non-cash payment instruments in 14 developed countries over 1987-1993. Our purpose is (1) to outline the current use of check, paper giro, electronic giro, credit card, and debit card payments and (2) to determine why some payment instruments are used more intensively than others, especially electronic versus paper-based payments. Standard demand theory influences (own price and incomes, institutional factors, and simple availability measures across countries are examined, as is the effect of habit formation. Payment substitution relationships are also estimated and indicate that checks will decline with further growth of electronic payments while the instruments that make up electronic payments will tend to expand together rather than replace one another. Copyright 1996 by Ohio State University Press.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a new nationally representative consumer survey to analyze the current use of debit cards by U.S. consumers, including how demographics affect use, and how consumers substitute between debit and other payment instruments.
Abstract: Debit card use at the point of sale has grown dramatically in recent years in the United States and now exceeds the number of credit card transactions. However, many questions remain regarding patterns of debit card use, consumer preferences when using debit, and how consumers might respond to explicit pricing of card transactions. Using a new nationally representative consumer survey, this paper describes the current use of debit cards by U.S. consumers, including how demographics affect use. In addition, consumers' stated reasons for using debit cards are used to analyze how consumers substitute between debit and other payment instruments. We also examine the relationship between household financial conditions and payment choice. Finally, we use a key variable on bank-imposed transaction fees to analyze price sensitivity of card use, and find a 12% decline in overall use in reaction to a mean 1.8% fee charged on certain debit card transactions; we believe this represents the first microeconomic evidence in the United States on price sensitivity for a card payment at the point of sale.
TL;DR: This study examines how young consumers perceive Internet banking in relation to other six banking channels and shows that Internet banking is considered to be efficient for ease of use and access and that the users of Internet banking lack confidence in the security of the web sites of Internet Banking.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed and estimated a structural model of adoption and usage of payment instruments by U.S. consumers using a cross-section from the Survey of Consumer Payment Choice.
Abstract: This paper develops and estimates a structural model of adoption and usage of payment instruments by U.S. consumers. We utilize a cross-section from the Survey of Consumer Payment Choice, a new survey of consumer behavior. Our empirical model combines the elements of a discrete-continuous model, where rst a consumer picks a product and then chooses how much to use it, with a bundled choice model, in which consumers can choose multiple products that may aect the utility derived from each other. We consider how changes in the costs of adoption and usage may dierentially aect substitution patterns. These results are particularly relevant for bank pricing of debit card services in response to the regulation of interchange fees on debit cards enacted by the Durbin Amendment to the Dodd-Frank Act which became eective on