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RBA Glossary definition for credit card
credit card – A credit card is a card whose holder has been granted a revolving credit line. The card enables the holder to make purchases and/or cash advances up to a pre-arranged limit. The credit granted can be settled in full by the end of a specified period or in part, with the balance taken as extended credit. Interest may be charged on the transaction amounts from the date of each transaction or only on the extended credit where the credit granted has not been settled in full.
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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
The ATM Market in Australia
31 Dec 2012
RDP
2012-03
card. Schwartz et al(2008) make an allowance for the issuer costs of credit card advances, which reflect the cost of the payment function for these transactions. ... If the costs of credit functions are included, the weighted-average card issuer cost is
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2012/2012-03/atm-mkt-australia.html
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Where’s the Money‽ An Investigation into the Whereabouts and Uses of Australian Banknotes
11 Dec 2018
RDP
PDF
1641KB
driven by an increasing use of cards (credit and debit) to carry out in-person payments (Figure 2). ... 16. Figure 11: Estimates of Cash Spending. Monthly. Notes: Card payments includes payments made by businesses using debit cards; dashed line indicates
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2018/pdf/rdp2018-12.pdf
Methodology
2 Dec 2009
RDP
2009-07
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
Of course, not everyone pays the average interest rate. Households with few financial assets pay more: they are charged mortgage insurance and they borrow at high rates, for example on credit ... cards, more frequently.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2014/2014-06/appendix-a.html
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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
Reduced-form Model
6 May 2018
RDP
2018-05
In many senses, this is quite similar to an idiosyncratic credit supply shock. ... The companies facing higher interest rates could be relying on more expensive forms of borrowing, such as credit cards or overdrafts, rather than bank loans or corporate
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2018/2018-05/reduced-form-model.html
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Appendix B: Variable Definitions
31 Dec 2003
RDP
2003-08
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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How Risky is Australian Household Debt?
19 Aug 2020
RDP
PDF
1880KB
Verner (2017) conclude that recessions preceded by rapid credit growth tend to be deeper than. ... 1 Above-trend credit-to-GDP ratio (the economy-wide counterpart to household debt-to-income ratio) was also found.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2020/pdf/rdp2020-05.pdf
Introduction
17 Apr 2009
RDP
2009-02
These assumptions do, however, limit the scope for such analysis to inform our understanding of competition between, say, different types of payment instruments, such as debit versus credit cards. ... Footnotes. An example is the credit card market in
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2009/2009-02/introduction.html
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