Regulating Interchange Fees in Payment Systems
Preprint
- 9 October 2001
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper provides a simple model of 'four party' payment systems designed to consider recent moves to regulate interchange fees and other rules of credit card associations. In contrast to recent formal analyses emphasising the role of network effects in the decisions of customer and merchants to use credit cards, we provide a model without such effects. In so doing, we identify the key role played by customers who determine the choice of payment instrument and hence, impose costs and benefits on other parties to a payment system. This model yields new insights regarding the role played by card association rules as well as confirming results derived elsewhere. In particular, we demonstrate that 'no surcharge' rules can encourage transaction efficiency by eliminating payment instrument choice as a means of price discrimination. We also demonstrate that, even in the absence of network effects, a desire for balance drives both the socially optimal and privately profit maximising choice of interchange fees. The role of the interchange fee is to ensure that the customer internalises the impact of its decisions on other participants to a payment system rather than from a need to account for network effects alone. Thus, the presence or otherwise of network effects should not be the focus of regulatory attention.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Paying with PlasticPublished by MIT Press ,2004
- Cooperation among Competitors: Some Economics of Payment Card AssociationsThe RAND Journal of Economics, 2002
- Payment Systems and Interchange FeesPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2001
- The Determinants of Optimal Interchange Fees in Payment SystemsSSRN Electronic Journal, 2001
- The Neutrality of Interchange Fees in Payment SystemsSSRN Electronic Journal, 2001
- Bank Interchange of Transactional Paper: Legal and Economic PerspectivesThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1983