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RBA Glossary definition for dual-network card

dual-network card – A payment card that can be used to initiate transactions, typically from the same deposit account, for two different payment processing networks. For example, a debit card (sometimes also known as an ATM card) that can be used to make a payment via either the eftpos network or one of the international scheme networks. These cards usually have an international scheme logo (Mastercard or Visa) on one side and the eftpos logo on the other.

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Mortgage-related Financial Difficulties: Evidence from Australian Micro-level Data

4 Feb 2015 RDP PDF 728KB
Mortgage status %%. 2010. Credit card paymentbehaviour. Doesn’tpay off. Pays offNo cardBehindAbout onAhead. ... credit card ordid not always pay off the entire balance of their credit card each month.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2014/pdf/rdp2014-13.pdf

Method

11 Sep 2015 RDP 2015-01
Tom Bilston, Robert Johnson and Matthew Read
and P and C are the estimated interest payments on personal and credit card debt, respectively. ... Losses are assumed to be borne in order of credit cards, other personal loans and mortgages; this puts downward pressure on LGDs for housing loans and
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2015/2015-01/method.html
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The ATM Market in Australia

31 Dec 2012 RDP 2012-03
Clare Noone
RDP 2012-03: ATM Fees, Pricing and Consumer Behaviour: An Analysis of ATM Network Reform in Australia 2. ... If the costs of credit functions are included, the weighted-average card issuer cost is $0.04 higher.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2012/2012-03/atm-mkt-australia.html
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Read me file for Consumer Payment Behaviour in Australia: Evidence from the 2019 Consumer Payments Survey

10 Sep 2020 RDP PDF 457KB
RDP 2020-06 supplementary information
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2020/2020-06/rdp-2020-06-read-me.pdf

Methodology

2 Dec 2009 RDP 2009-07
Laura Berger-Thomson, Elaine Chung and Rebecca McKibbin
This accounts for the possibility that households who obtain a credit card may do so in order to fund greater consumption. ... We do not account for the effect that servicing any credit card debt will have on consumption.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2009/2009-07/methodology.html
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Appendix A: Data Details

12 Sep 2014 RDP 2014-06
Ryan Fox and Peter Tulip
cards, more frequently.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2014/2014-06/appendix-a.html

Appendix B: Variable Definitions

31 Dec 2003 RDP 2003-08
Gianni La Cava and John Simon
household gross income (%). MORTGAGE DEBT = household mortgage repayments as a proportion of total weekly household disposable income (%). CREDIT CARDS = number of credit cards in the household. CREDIT CARD INTEREST = 1 if ... household pays interest on
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2003/2003-08/appendix-b.html
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Is the Phillips Curve Still a Curve? Evidence from the Regions

31 Aug 2021 RDP 2021-09
James Bishop and Emma Greenland
A central bank with a dual mandate for achieving full employment and inflation at some target level will respond to the various shocks that hit the economy by weighing up these
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2021/2021-09/full.html
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The Link between the Cash Rate and Market Interest Rates

1 Dec 2009 RDP PDF 179KB
Housing rate. Personal instalment rate. Credit card rate. Lending ratesDeposit rates %%. 4. 8. 12. 16. 20. 24. Cash rate. 2-yr treasury bonds. ... The stickiest interest rate is the rate on credit cards. BetweenJanuary 1986 and October 1994, the credit
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1995/pdf/rdp9504.pdf

Another Model

17 Apr 2009 RDP 2009-03
George Gardner and Andrew Stone
In combination with their holding the choice of payment instrument at the moment of sale, this removes any feedback from merchant behaviour into consumers' card holding choices. ... imply more favourable pricing by platforms towards consumers than if the
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2009/2009-03/ano-model.html
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