A Kaulkin Ginsberg Publication
Ontario
03/19/2010

PR - Fed Reports More than Two-Thirds of Noncash Payments are Electronic

December 13, 2007
 
Digg!
What's this?


The Federal Reserve’s 2007 study of noncash payments released today revealed that in 2006 more than two-thirds of all U.S noncash payments were made electronically. From 2003 to 2006, the period covered by the study, all types of electronic payments grew while check payments decreased. The Federal Reserve’s 2004 Payments Study found that the number of electronic payments and check payments were roughly equal in 2003.

About 19 billion more electronic payments were made in 2006 than in 2003.  In contrast, the number of checks paid fell by about 7 billion over the same period.  Of the 93 billion noncash payments in 2006, about 63 billion were electronic and around 30 billion were checks.

Among the three main types of electronic payments, the annual use of debit cards increased by about 10 billion payments over the survey period to 25.3 billion payments in 2006.  Debit cards now surpass credit cards as the most frequently used electronic payment type.  Over the same period, automated clearinghouse (ACH) payments grew to 14.6 billion, an increase of almost 6 billion payments. Credit cards grew by almost 3 billion payments to 21.7 billion in 2006.

Interactive Data - Who Are You Searching For?

Social Security Search. Bankruptcy Information. Directory Assistance (EDA). Real Estate Listings. Death Index.

Click here for more information...

The highest rate of growth from 2003 to 2006 was in ACH payments, which grew about 19 percent per year, followed closely by debit card payments at almost 18 percent.  Meanwhile, checks declined by an average of 6.4 percent per year since 2003, indicating the pace at which check payments has been decreasing since the mid-1990s has picked up in recent years.

One of the most significant changes of the past three years has been the increasing proportion of checks processed electronically.  Such changes have improved the efficiency of the check clearing system for interbank checks--those drawn on a different depository institution than the one at which they were deposited.  At the time of the survey, about 40 percent of all interbank checks paid were replaced with electronic information at some point in the collection process.  

In addition to the 30 billion checks paid, some payments that started out as checks became electronic payments. During 2006, almost 3 billion consumer checks--including checks sent to billers or used as source documents to initiate electronic payments at the point of sale--were converted and cleared as ACH payments rather than check payments, an eight-fold increase since 2003.  A total of 33 billion checks were written in 2006.

“The results of our study underscore the ongoing importance of check electronification and other innovations that improve the efficiency of the U.S. payments system,” said Richard Oliver, executive vice president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and the Federal Reserve Banks’ product manager for retail payments. “With around 33 billion checks written in 2006, we expect checks to be around for some time.”

The 2007 Federal Reserve Payments Study consists of three research efforts commissioned to estimate the annual number, dollar value, and composition of noncash retail payments in the United States. The Depository Institutions Payments Study included responses from approximately 1,400 financial institutions (commercial banks, savings institutions and credit unions).  The Electronic Payments Study, included responses from 65 of the largest payment networks and card issuers.  A third study, which will categorize the use of checks by payer, payee, and purpose, is expected to be published during the first quarter of 2008.

“The Fed’s 2007 Payments Study is part of an ongoing effort by the Federal Reserve System to measure trends in noncash payments in the United States,” Oliver said.  “This year’s study repeats critical aspects of our previous studies, providing additional point-in-time estimates from which inferences can be drawn about the rate and nature of change of the U.S. payments system.  We appreciate the efforts of all the institutions that provided the information needed to conduct these studies.”

A summary report of the 2007 Federal Reserve Payments Study is available at http://www.frbservices.org/Retail/pdf/2007_payments_study.pdf. Detail reports on the individual studies will be available in early 2008.

Get Hired - jobsInsideARM.comHiring? Post a job - jobsInsideARM.com

Be the First To Comment

(Please read our comments policy first.)

From:
Show my identity with comment

Leave this field empty
Interested in more stories like this?
Tell us what topics you're interested in and we'll keep you posted. Enter your email address below.
United Recovery Ststems
Interrior Concepts
Interior Concepts
Global Connect
  • DCM Services
  • Columbia Ultimate
  • Tracers
  • DAKCS
  • Interactive Data

Log In

Already registered? Log in here.





Forgot your password?

Register for FREE with insideARM

Create an account with insideARM and get access to our FREE newsletters and industry reports.










 

Check all | Uncheck all

Daily news and analysis
* Recommended *
Credit cards
Healthcare
Government/Municipal
Student loans
Mortgage
Auto finance
Collection agency operations
Collection technology
Debt purchasing
Recovery management
Hiring/Staffing
Job opportunities
Leave this field empty
 

You are already registered!

The email address you've entered is already in our database, meaning you've previously registered on insideARM.com.

All you have to do is log in using the form on the left.