|

 
|
|

William Poole
President and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Checks Lose Market Share
to Electronic Payments
--and the Economy Gains
Do you still think Americans are addicted to their checkbooks and have
reservations about using electronic forms of payment? Think again. A new
study by the Federal Reserve shows that e-payments in this country are
growing at a rapid rate and at the expense of checks.
Replacing checks with electronic payments is good for the economy;
electronic payments are just plain more efficient. E-payments are cheaper
to process--mills vs. cents for checks. Moreover, some forms of
e-payments, such as direct deposit and debit cards, clear almost
instantly, whereas checks can still take a few days.
Granted, it's easier to achieve such growth when starting from a
small base. Some forms of e-payments, such as debit cards, weren't
even around in 1979. Others, such as direct deposit, were in their
infancy. But, like a teen-ager hitting a growth spurt, the use of these
new payment methods has shot up. More than 8 billion transactions are now
conducted every year with debit cards, second only to the longtime king of
e-payments, the credit card. Automated Clearing House (ACH) payments, such
as direct deposit, rank third with 5.6 billion transactions. (When ranked
by the dollar value of transactions, ACH leads, accounting for
three-fourths of the $7 trillion in e-payments.)
With 30 billion transactions a year, e-payments are clearly more than a
Gen X fad, and the switch to e-payments might be further accelerated by
the recent scares involving the safety of U.S. mail.
Although the Fed has long encouraged the use of e-payments, we're not
ready to predict that a checkless society is around the corner. We
don't even know if the number of checks has stopped growing. Although
the check share of all non-cash payments has fallen to 60 percent from 85
percent, the total number of non-cash payments has more than doubled since
1979 to 80 billion. The Fed will conduct another payments study in two or
three years--not another 20--to get a better idea of where the
various forms of payment are headed.
Meanwhile, we hope that all stakeholders in this issue can use this study
to pick out the best form of payment to use in the future for themselves
and for their clients. For those who want to stick with checks, rest
assured that the option will not be taken away. Count me among those who
can't imagine ever using a "smart card" to pay for Girl
Scout cookies, although it may happen! In the end, we shouldn't fool
ourselves about the popularity of e-payments: Even the nation's
largest printer of checks long ago branched out into the electronic
payments business.
For details on the retail payments study, go to www.frbservices.org.
|