ECB-MNB Budapest, November 15 Björn Segendorf och Thomas Jansson What does it cost to pay? Sweden 2009.

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Presentation transcript:

ECB-MNB Budapest, November 15 Björn Segendorf och Thomas Jansson What does it cost to pay? Sweden 2009

Agenda Background Problems Results Expected and actual choice b/w cash and debit card

Background Objective: estimate the costs for P2B payments Cash, cards, credit transfers, direct debits Common methodology, 13 EU MS Data from 2009 Riksbank, CITs, banks and firms (2010) Direct and indirect costs Consumer costs calculated theoretically

Background – social costs Value of consumed resources Differ from private costs Payments & fees between actors should not be included … Seignorage Kickbacks Value of stolen cash Fraud

Background - obstacles Data: costs, value, volume ”Small” problems for CB, CITs and banks. Large market share Firms: small sample (11) but lengthy interviews Check for internal consistency and with other data No official transaction data for cash to benchmark against Aggregation of data Easy for CB, CITs and banks Difficult for firms Small sample Aggregation weights from household consumption data 2009: an extreme year?

Background – value and volume P2B

Cards, cash and efficiency Different cost structure for cash and cards Cards: ”fixed cost” per transaction Cash: cost increases with transaction size Conclusion: Threshold in transaction amount where the cost for cards equal the cost for cash Below threshold: Cash is cheaper Over threshold: Card is cheaper However, private incentives of consumers are different

Calculated and observed thresholds Conclusions Large difference b/w social and private thresholds Consumers does not act in accordance to social thresholds Too much cash Not clear that consumers act in accordance to economic incentives (USD)

Thank you!