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The Green Sheet Online Edition

February 2, 2025 • 25:02:02

Insider's report on payments: The changing payments landscape

When I was in college, in the early 1970s, credit cards were hard to come by. Once graduated, the first thing most people my age did was obtain a store credit card. After you had one for a time and could prove you were a good credit risk, you could go for a regional credit card, or even Visa or Mastercard plastic.

That was then. This is now. Today, most college students carry credit and/or debit cards, and many of those are tied to instant payment networks, like Venmo or Zelle. Plastic is just so 20th century, at least for the younger generations.

I've reviewed several reports highlighting changes in consumer and merchant payment preferences. Gleaned insights follow.

McKinsey: A2A not a slam dunk in U.S.

Account-to-account payments, also known as pay-by-bank payments, face challenges in card-dominated markets like the United States, according to a recent McKinsey & Co. report authored by Andy Dresner, a partner in McKinsey's New York office, and Amit Gandhi, an associate partner in the firm's Atlanta office.

Some of the challenges are regulatory in nature. An underlying premise of A2A payments is open banking, which requires consumers to grant permission for a service provider to gain access to their banking credentials. In the United States, rules laying out the guardrails for open banking were put in place in October 2024 by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

But in early February of this year, CFPB employees were told to stay home and put all their work projects on the back burner as part of a government cost-cutting move.

That's not the only reason A2A will have trouble gaining traction in the United States "Americans love their credit cards and the rewards that come with them, so dislodging the popularity of cards is perhaps the biggest challenge to U.S. adoption of A2A," Dresner and Gandhi wrote.

They estimated that A2A could handle about $200 billion in consumer-to-business transactions by 2026; potentially more in other types of payments. "The impact may be limited for daily transactions with a retailer or service provider but larger for big-ticket and recurring payments such as utility bills, insurance payments and more," they wrote.

Noting that merchants like the idea of bank-to-bank payments because pricing is well below interchange and A2A can significantly reduce fraud and chargebacks, the authors suggested consumers may want something in return for foregoing credit cards – something that compensates them for the loss of bank rewards points. Bottom line: cards will dominate payments, especially in the digital space, with A2A payments holding a small but growing share.

Paysafe: Age matters

Card payments remain the most common way for consumers to transact. Yet, responses are not cut and dried. Asked for a 2024 Paysafe survey which payment methods they used for the majority of payments, the top four vote getters were:

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