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What Will
Replace Cash for Small Payments?
But credit cards have their
limitations. They are not suitable for purchases of digital content costing less
than a few dollars per transaction (micro-payments). The card system is not cost
efficient for processing small payment amounts, and in many cases the minimum
transaction amount is around US$10.
To
sell digital content, a different payment method is required. In the early days
of the internet, developers created ?e-money,? enabling consumers to purchase
low-cost items online from a website supported by the e-money provider. However,
there was the potential for fraud on the part of the e-money providers, to whom
consumers supplied their credit-card numbers in exchange for tokens.
Many of these early attempts
to create e-money mechanisms for managing micro-payment transactions schemas met
with business failure (e.g., early micro-payment vendors such as Flooz, Benz,
Digicash). Even for feasible business cases, the failures often occurred because
the merchants had to implement additional hardware/software requirements, and
the customers had to prepay. It was simply too difficult to implement, and not
worth the (then) small revenue streams from the internet.
But the situation is much
different now. New micro-payment services allow customers to set up online
accounts tied to their chequing and savings accounts, thereby reaching a whole
new segment of customers without credit cards. Micro-payment also has another
future as a replacement for cash to pay for goods and services at shops, cafes,
bars, libraries, printers, pharmacies, sports centres, photocopying and
laser-printing shops, as well as for bus and taxi fares, or for any purchase in
which coins are used.
What are evolving from the
early attempts are three distinct micro-payment schemas:
- The Retail Model which
utilizes a stored value system
- The Telco Model which leverages the telcos? billing system
- The Financial Model which uses a multi-application smart card with an e-purse
The Retail Model - Stored Value Systems
The principal of the stored
value systems is based on the micro-payments schema: store value accounts are
connected to a credit card in which a consumer has to load credits in order to
make a purchases, or connected to a stored value account that accumulates
payments and makes authorizations based on increments.
With a stored value system,
the consumers need to register for the services online or by phone; they have to
provide a credit card number and load a balance. In order for the consumer to be
able to make re-loads, the system needs to remember his or her information.
Stored value systems are common in the service industry, for example as part of
the McQuick service in Canada.
Telco Model - Micro-Payment Billing
The rapid penetration of GSM
handsets has already led to a situation in which more individuals carry a
telephone than carry a bankcard. Additionally, people tend to have a single
mobile telephone from a single operator, whereas they might have multiple
bankcards.
This suggests that mobile
operators have access to demographic segments not available to traditional
financial institutions. By targeting the right demographic group, mobile
operators can use their own billing systems to register micro-payment
transactions. Pricing wireless applications on a per-use or subscription basis
is the best way to appeal to consumers and to give them value for their money.
More importantly, separating content fees from transport fees allows carriers to
keep all transport revenues while enabling a revenue stream for content
providers.
The Financial Model - Smart Card with E-Purse
The smart card uses chip card
technology and is designed for secure payments over the internet and mobile
phones, and for micro-payments such as those made in fast-food restaurants,
movie chains, convenience stores, vending machines, payphones, and on mass
transportation and toll highways. A smart card payment scheme can manage
low-value and high-value payments. The low-value payment scheme is known as
e-purse, which is a cash-like, prepaid scheme, where the user has the choice of
making either personalized or anonymous payments.
Purchases can be made on the
internet by a smart card reader that connects to a PC. Secure internet payments
may be made just as they are in shops which use this device. The internet
merchant uses a terminal which is similar to a normal shop merchant?s, and
payment and collection are made in the same way.
An example of an
intra-regional standard for cash is the NETS Singapore CashCard under the Visa
Cash brand, which has been implemented in Singapore, Philippines, and Korea, and
recently in Thailand.
Standards are required to
develop nation-wide smart card?based electronic purses that operate on a
regional basis. Coupled with the possibility of location-based services driven
by the mobile telephone network, the mobile telephone operator is well
positioned to market goods and services to consumers on a one-to-one basis.
Conclusion
There are a number of
challenges facing the retail banking sector today. The tradition of providing a
customer with account access via a cheque or magnetic striped card is no longer
the way to attract or retain ever-more-discerning consumers. Escalating card
fraud and new delivery channels have changed the business landscape forever.
Micro-payments tied to a chip
card could be a winner. The trends indicate that the most feasible solution?and
the one increasingly embraced worldwide?seems to be the smart card, a plastic
card which stores all personal data in its embedded microchip and which can be
used for many functions, thereby doing away with the need to stuff wallets with
many other single-function plastic cards. Another factor is the migration of
credit and debit cards from magnetic strip to EMV, which allows these cards to
be used seamlessly for micro-payments.
The users have already been
educated. They know how to use plastic cards, and using smart cards would be the
same, but common standards are important. The added advantage with a chip card
is that a loyalty feature can be added to the chip, a natural extension which
none of the other micro-payment methods can handle well.
There are some issues
associated with a smart card schema. For example, security needs to be
foolproof: once a card has been breached, the cost of replacement is high.
Security costs money, and so smart cards tend to be more expensive than other
methods.
With the stored value system,
the problem is user acceptance. Users have to manage their own accounts, and if
there are many different service providers the user has many accounts to manage.
In order for a real stored value system to work, the banks have to get behind it
and adopt a standard which merchants can sign up for.
The success of the mobile
operators will depend on the number of merchants or content providers who adopt
the operators? billing systems. In order to attract customers, merchants are
offering phone-customization features such as ring tones, games, screen savers,
and music. It is a good market, but the real adoption will happen only when
merchants can accept payments.
The retail model will see
minimum success. Large retailers might develop loyal customers who would use
smart cards or a stored value system offered by a financial services
organization.
Over the next few years it
will be interesting to see which technology will demonstrate staying power and
be adopted by consumers.
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