JOINT MEDIA RELEASE
Date: 16 September 1999
Embargo: 12.00 noon AEST
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STUDY OF INTERCHANGE FEES AND ACCESS IN DEBIT AND CREDIT
CARD SCHEMES
AUSTRALIAN COMPETITION AND CONSUMER COMMISSION
AND
THE RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA
The Payments System Board of the Reserve Bank and the Australian Competition
and Consumer Commission will undertake a joint study into interchange
fees for debit and credit cards, and membership criteria for credit cards.
The objectives of the joint study are to:
- obtain information on interchange fees paid by financial institutions;
- clarify the basis on which interchange fees are currently set, looking
particularly at the role of costs;
- assess whether current interchange fees are encouraging efficient
provision of debit and credit card services; and
- obtain information on current restrictions on credit card scheme membership.
The first phase of the study will involve the collection of relevant
data on debit and credit card schemes from all current participants. During
the second phase, a discussion paper on interchange fees and credit card
membership criteria will be issued and interested parties will be invited
to comment. Final conclusions will be made public.
The study is expected to take around 12 months to complete.
Debit and credit card transactions are an important and growing component
of the Australian payments system, together accounting for around 40 per
cent of non-cash transactions. The efficient provision of these services
is therefore essential to the efficiency of the payments system. However,
many of the details of debit and credit card arrangements are not publicly
available, making it difficult to judge whether the arrangements meet
the needs of the community. In particular, little is known about the interchange
fees charged by financial institutions to each other when debit and credit
cards are used, or about the scope for new entrants to compete in some
aspects of card business.
As background to the study, the Board and the ACCC note that:
- in 1997, the ACCC asked the Australian Payments Clearing Association
to require its members to implement "efficient pricing principles"
in setting fees for EFTPOS and ATM interchanges, as a condition of authorisation
of its proposed rules for the Consumer Electronic Clearing System. The
ACCC was concerned that interchange fees could unreasonably restrict
access to ATM and EFTPOS networks. APCA has subsequently advised the
ACCC that it does not have the capacity to undertake self-regulation
of interchange fees;
- some participants in ATM and EFTPOS arrangements have suggested that
interchange fees for EFTPOS, in particular, are anti-competitive, making
it difficult for new and smaller players to enter the business. Interchange
fees for EFTPOS in Australia run in the opposite direction to those
overseas; and
- merchants have expressed concerns that restrictions on membership
of credit card schemes place them in a worse competitive position on
the fees they bear than is the case for debit card transactions.
The study is in line with the recommendations of the Financial System
Inquiry (Wallis Committee).
The ACCC is also conducting a separate investigation under the Trade
Practices Act in relation to the setting of credit card interchange fees.
Enquiries:
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Enquiries:
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RBA
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ACCC
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| Manager, Information Office |
Ms Lin Enright |
| Reserve Bank of Australia |
Director, Public Relations |
| SYDNEY |
ACCC |
| (02) 9551 9720 |
CANBERRA |
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(02) 6243 1108 |
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| Dr John Veale |
Allan Asher |
| Head of Payments Policy
Dept |
Acting Chairman |
| Reserve Bank of Australia |
ACCC |
| (02) 9551 8700 |
CANBERRA |
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(02) 6243 1138 |
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MR 175/99 |
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