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Document 52011DC0941
GREEN PAPER Towards an integrated European market for card, internet and mobile payments
GREEN PAPER Towards an integrated European market for card, internet and mobile payments
GREEN PAPER Towards an integrated European market for card, internet and mobile payments
/* COM/2011/0941 final */
GREEN PAPER Towards an integrated European market for card, internet and mobile payments /* COM/2011/0941 final */
GREEN PAPER Towards an integrated European market for
card, internet and mobile payments (Text with EEA relevance)
1.
Introduction
Secure, efficient,
competitive and innovative electronic payments are crucial if consumers,
retailers and companies are to enjoy the full benefits of the Single Market, and
increasingly so as the world moves beyond bricks-and-mortar trade towards
e-commerce. The way goods and services are purchased in Europe is fundamentally
changing. As EU citizens and businesses become increasingly active outside
their country of origin, electronic payments that work smoothly across borders significantly
facilitate their daily lives. Building on achievements in the field of retail payments,
Europe has an opportunity to be at the cutting edge of what ‘making a payment’
could mean in the future, be it with a payment card, on the internet or by
using a mobile phone. A first
important milestone on this journey is the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA), which
is based on the premise that there
should be no distinction between cross-border and domestic electronic retail payments[1]
in euro across the EU. The SEPA project covers the key retail payment
instruments: credit transfers, direct debits and payment cards. From this basis,
SEPA should be a springboard to creating a competitive and innovative European
payments market in two ways. The first concerns the ever-growing proportion of on-line
or internet payments (e-payments) and mobile payments (m-payments). Above all, the
mass take-up of smart phones is changing the payments landscape and is leading
to new payment applications, for example electronic purses, replacing wallets
and physical cards, or virtual public transport tickets stored in a mobile
phone. Here, the pan-European SEPA payment instruments can provide the basis
for more integrated and secure payment innovations. Secondly, the existing
standards and rules developed under SEPA could be re-applied to payment
instruments in non-euro currencies, thereby taking the boundaries of a Single
Market for payments beyond euro-denominated transactions. The benefits of
more market integration would mainly stem from four drivers: 1) More competition — in a
network industry, such as payments, market access for new entrants or
competitors from other Member States is facilitated through integration. Based
on common open standards, service providers could offer their existing payment
solutions in more than one country. This would expand their business base and hence
create an additional incentive for innovation. As a result, the costs and
prices of providing payments would converge downwards. Moreover, more
competition could mitigate the current domination of the payment cards market by
the two existing international card schemes. 2) More choice and transparency
for consumers — with a broader range of competitive services, payment users
could choose the payment instruments and providers that best serve their needs.
Today, the cost implications of the choice they make are often not visible to
consumers[2].
Due to hidden costs, often the most expensive payment method is used and costs
are indirectly passed to all consumers through increased prices. By contrast,
an integrated and transparent market would steer consumers towards the most
efficient payment instruments. 3) More
innovation — an integrated market increases scale
effects. This means that existing players would have more opportunities to save
costs or increase revenue. Furthermore, the incentives for innovation by new
market entrants would be higher and the geographical scope of innovation would
increase. 4) More payment security and customer
trust — in line with the progress achieved in safe and secure payments at
the point-of-sale, an integrated market would increase the security of, and
consumer’s trust in, remote payments, such as e-payments and m-payments. An integrated EU market for payment
services could also produce, as a by-product, administrative data that could be
used for the production of harmonised statistics. This would increase the
quality and scope of EU statistics, with no additional costs for companies and
limited investment for the statistical community. This Green Paper assesses the current
landscape of card, internet and mobile payments in Europe, identifies the gaps between
the current situation and the vision of a fully integrated payments market and
the barriers which have created these gaps. The objective of the Green Paper is
to launch a broad-scale consultation process with stakeholders to validate or contribute
to the Commission’s analysis and to help identify the right way to improve
market integration.
2.
Current payments landscape and
its shortfalls
The euro retail payments market is one of
the largest in the world and involves millions of companies and hundreds of
millions of citizens. According to statistics from the European Central Bank (ECB),
in 2009 almost 58 billion retail payment transactions were made in the
euro area alone. Annex 1 provides a breakdown by payment instrument. The
economic benefits of integrating this market are substantial. For example, studies
suggest that full migration to SEPA for credit transfers, direct debits and
payment cards could yield direct and indirect benefits of more than EUR 300 billion
over a six-year period. The current degree of payment integration at European
level varies markedly between the various payment instruments (such as credit
transfers, direct debits and payment cards) and channels (e- or m-payments) used
to make a payment.
2.1.
Core payment instruments (credit transfers and direct debits)
Credit transfers and direct debits are the
only payment instruments for which specific pan-European payment schemes exist,
namely the SEPA Credit Transfer (SCT) and SEPA Direct Debit (SDD) rulebooks
developed by the European Payments Council (EPC) for payments in euro. In December
2010, the Commission presented a proposal for a Regulation setting obligatory deadlines
for migrating national payment schemes to pan-European schemes[3]. Reaching this essential
milestone will lay the foundation for further market integration for the
payment instruments and channels described below.
2.2.
Payment cards
Payment cards are the most common and
frequently used electronic payment instrument for retail payments. In terms of volume
(number of transactions), card payments represented a third of all retail payments
in 2009. There were some 726 million payment cards in use in the EU, representing
1.45 cards per capita. On average, EU consumers spent EUR 2 194 per card in
43 point-of-sale card transactions (in 2009[4],
see Annex 1 for country specific data). However, integration of the European payment
card market is far from complete and tangible results are still limited. A
steep increase of the volume of card payments over the past decade and the
resulting large scale effects have not led to any significant fall in consumer
costs and inter-bank or merchant fees. Moreover, domestic debit card schemes are
often not accepted outside the Member State of origin, which hinders the development
of the Single Market. Fraudulent use of payment cards also remains an issue,
especially for remote transactions.
2.3.
Payments through the internet (e-payments)
E-payments are payments made over the
internet, usually in one of these three ways: 1) Making a remote payment card
transaction through the internet. 2) Online-banking based credit
transfers or direct debits under which the payer uses an online banking
portal for authentication (currently only operational at domestic level)[5]. 3) Payments through e-payment
providers, with which the consumer has set up an individual account.
Accounts can be funded through ‘traditional’ payment methods, for example bank
transfers or credit card payments. With the emergence of e-commerce, i.e. the
buying and selling of products over the internet, e-payments play an
increasingly important role. According to Forrester Research[6], the number of online shoppers
in Europe is forecast to increase from 141 million in 2009 to 190 million
by 2014. Annual growth rates of the e-commerce market size over the next five
years are projected at around 10 %. Average spending per capita at EU
level is forecast to rise from EUR 483 in 2009 to EUR 601 in 2014.
Despite its significant growth potential, e-commerce currently represents only 3.4%
of all European retail trade[7],
so there still is considerable untapped growth potential. According to a public consultation on the
future of electronic commerce[8],
payments have been identified as one of the main barriers to the future growth
of e-commerce. The related key issues identified in the consultation include
the diversity of payment methods across Member States, the cost of payments for
consumers and merchants, especially for low-value payments (micro-payments) and
payment security. The lack of a coherent and comprehensive (self-) regulatory
framework currently leads to a European e-payments environment that is largely
fragmented along national borders with a small number of successful domestic e‑payment
schemes and a limited number of large international players from outside Europe.
2.4.
Mobile payments (m-payments)
M-payments are payments for which the
payment data and the payment instruction are initiated, transmitted or
confirmed via a mobile phone or device. This can apply to online or offline
purchases of services, digital or physical goods. Mobile payments can be classified into two
main categories: 1) Remote m-payments mostly
take place through internet/WAP[9]
or through premium SMS services which are billed to the payer through the
Mobile Network Operator (MNO). Most remote m-payments through the internet are
currently based on card payment schemes. Other solutions, based on credit
transfers or direct debits, are technically feasible and possibly as secure,
efficient and competitive, but seem to have difficulties entering the market. 2) Proximity payments generally
take place directly at the point of sale. Using Near Field Communication (NFC),
the leading proximity technology at this stage, payments require
specifically equipped phones which can be recognised when put near a reader
module at the point of sale (e.g. stores, public transport, parking spaces). These definitions, in particular for remote
m-payments, suggest that the line between e‑payments and m-payments is
blurred, and may become even more so in the future. The volume of payments made through mobile
phones is currently the fastest growing of all payment methods. The rapid
proliferation of smart phones with the option of installing sophisticated payment
applications has fuelled this development. Juniper Research forecasts that
between 2010 and 2012 the value of all m-payments worldwide will increase from
USD 100 billion to USD 200 billion. Other studies suggest
that the value of m-payments worldwide will surpass USD 1 trillion in
2014, totalling USD 350 billion in Europe alone. It is also estimated
that one out of five smart phones will be NFC-capable by the same date. Market penetration of m-payments in the EU still
has considerable unrealised potential, in comparison, for example, to the Asia/Pacific
region. According to estimates by the research company Gartner, there were 7.1 million
mobile payment users in Western Europe in 2010, compared to 62.8 million
users in Asia/Pacific, a large share of them in Japan. One of the key reasons
for the slower market take-up in Europe is the highly fragmented mobile payment
market. The key market actors (mobile network operators, payment service
providers, mobile phone manufacturers) have not yet agreed on a viable business
model enabling inter-operable payment solutions. As a consequence, the largest
and most promising global m-payment initiatives are currently launched outside
Europe. Apple, Google and Visa have all announced major drives to enter the m-payment
business. Efforts for m-payment integration at
European level currently take place on a self-regulatory basis. In this
context, the EPC is cooperating with the global association of mobile operators
(GSMA) and published a White Paper on mobile payments in July 2010[10]. The White Paper focuses on
mobile payments through payment cards. As with e-payments, the lack of a concrete
European framework addressing main concerns, such as technical standards,
security, inter-operability, and the cooperation between market participants,
risks perpetuating a fragmented m-payments market in Europe. Furthermore for
both e- and m-payments, (potential) market participants seem reluctant to
invest as long as the legal situation regarding scope for applying collective
fee arrangements, such as for payment cards, has not been settled (see 4.1.
below).
3.
Vision and objectives
According to the
SEPA vision put forward by the European Commission and the ECB for electronic
retail payments in euro across the EU[11], there
should be no distinction between cross-border and domestic payments. On the
basis of the standards and rulebooks provided by SEPA, this distinction should
also become obsolete for non-euro payments within the EU. This would result in
a true digital Single Market at EU level. Full integration would mean: Consumers use
a single bank account for all payment transactions, even if they live outside
their country of origin or travel frequently throughout the EU. By accelerating
innovation, payments become more convenient and adjusted to the specific
circumstances of the purchasing transaction (online v offline, micro- v
large-value payments, etc.). Businesses and
public administrations are able to simplify and streamline their payment
processes and centralise financial operations across the EU. This has significant
potential to generate savings. Furthermore, common open standards and faster
settlement of payment transactions improve cash-flow. Merchants are
also able to benefit from cheap, efficient and secure electronic payment
solutions. Increased competition makes alternatives to handling cash more attractive.
In turn, this also makes moving into e-commerce more compelling and leads to
improved customer experiences when making payments. Payment service providers (PSPs), i.e. banks and non-bank PSPs, are able to benefit from economies
of scale through standardising payment instruments, thereby achieving cost
savings after the initial investment. It opens access to new markets, both for
increasing the revenue base for existing payment instruments and for launching
innovations on a broader scale. Technology providers, such as software vendors, processors and IT consultants, can base
their development work and solutions on pan-European instruments, facilitating
innovation across the EU Member States. For this vision to become reality for card,
e- and m-payments, a number of additional issues need to be addressed, such as
security, freedom of choice, unhindered technical and business innovation,
standardisation of the various components and interoperability. The following
chapter explores these issues in more detail.
4.
The need to foster and accelerate market integration
In line with the above vision, five potential
ways to stimulate the further integration of cards, e- and m-payments have been
identified.
4.1.
Market fragmentation, market access and market
entry across borders
A number of separate issues can be identified in this context. It is
important to note that these issues, while historically all stemming from
commercial practices for payment cards, either are applied in the same form for
e- and m-payments or at least have significant spill-over effects which affect
e- and m-payments indirectly, for example when an e- or m-payment is made
through the use of a payment card.
4.1.1.
Multilateral Inter-change Fees (MIFs)
Under the ‘classic’ business model for four-party card schemes,
inter-bank fees are paid by the merchant’s PSP (the acquiring PSP) to the
cardholder’s PSP (the issuing PSP) for each card transaction. Interchange fees
can be agreed bilaterally, between issuing and acquiring PSPs, or
multilaterally, by means of a decision binding all PSPs participating in a
payment card scheme. More background on MIFs is provided in Annex 2[12]. Competition authorities and regulators have been looking at
interchange fees for some time. In certain non-EU countries[13], they have been addressed by regulation. In the EU, the European
Commission and national competition authorities have adopted several decisions
prohibiting specific MIF arrangements under EU competition rules[14]. The usual justification for MIFs is that they provide a basis for
issuing PSPs to encourage consumers to use a payment card. Charging MIFs
enables issuing PSPs to give out cards for no or low cardholder fees and
potentially include bonuses[15]
for consumers (e.g. air miles). This ‘balancing
mechanism’ can create efficiencies through greater card use. The existence of a wide variety of different (levels of) fees and
the different timelines and scope of legal proceedings under way or completed at
national and European level could lead to distortions in the Single Market. This
could exacerbate market fragmentation, and means that retailers can not yet
enjoy the benefits of a Single Market in payment cards. In addition, high MIFs may act as entry barriers to low-cost card
schemes and other payment systems (e.g. e-payments and m-payments). These characteristics of MIFs generally apply with respect to four-party
schemes. Three-party schemes — under which there is only one PSP servicing both
payers and payees — apply an ‘implicit’ interchange fee that may raise similar
issues of lack of competitive constraints. The problems of high MIFs and a lack of transparency (see 4.2) appear
to be particularly relevant to merchants accepting commercial cards — i.e.
payment cards issued to companies and their employees in order to allow them to
pay for work-related expenses (e.g. business trips, office supplies)[16] — under which card holders may
be incentivised with bonuses and other advantages to make use of this means of
payment. Questions 1) Under the same card scheme, MIFs can differ from one
country to another, and for cross-border payments. Can this create problems in
an integrated market? Do you think that differing terms and conditions in the
card markets in different Member States reflect objective structural differences
in these markets? Do you think that the application of different fees for
domestic and cross-border payments could be based on objective reasons? 2) Is there a need to increase legal clarity on
interchange fees? If so, how and through which instrument do you think this could
be achieved? 3) If you think that action on interchange fees is necessary,
which issues should be covered and in which form? For example, lowering MIF
levels, providing fee transparency and facilitating market access? Should three-party
schemes be covered? Should a distinction be drawn between consumer and
commercial cards?
4.1.2.
Cross-border acquiring
Cross-border acquiring refers to a situation in which a merchant
uses the services of an acquiring PSP established in another country. Under
this arrangement, not only do all merchants benefit from more competition on
Merchant Service Charges (MCSs) but companies can also appoint a single
acquirer for their transactions, resulting in administrative efficiencies and
cross-border competition. However, a number of problems hinder the development of cross-border
acquiring. Apart from the difference in technical standards (covered in 4.3.) a
series of rules and arrangements applied by international card schemes can make
cross-border acquiring less attractive for merchants: –
International card schemes apply special authorisation
regimes and special scheme fees/license fees to acquirers offering cross-border
services. –
Cross-border acquirers must pay issuing PSPs the
domestic MIF applicable in the country of the point of sale. This prevents
merchants from shopping for the cheapest acquirer, although the cross-border PSP
has typically not signed up to the domestic MIF concerned, which is set by the PSPs
in the country concerned. –
Cross-border acquirers may also be at a disadvantage
in countries where domestic PSPs have parallel networks of bilateral
interchange fee agreements. This impedes the development of cross-border
competition as acquirers have to pay the official full MIF amount. Questions 4) Are there currently any obstacles to cross-border or central
acquiring? If so, what are the reasons? Would substantial benefits arise from facilitating
cross-border or central acquiring? 5) How could cross-border acquiring be facilitated? If you
think that action is necessary, which form should it take and what aspects
should it cover? For instance, is mandatory prior authorisation by the payment
card scheme for cross-border acquiring justifiable? Should MIFs be calculated on
the basis of the retailer’s country (at point of sale)? Or, should a cross-border
MIF be applicable to cross-border acquiring?
4.1.3.
Co-badging
Co-badging combines different payment brands on the same card or
device. Nowadays, the most promising way for new entrant schemes to access the
market could be to convince issuing PSPs to co-badge their payment cards that
carry an existing (international) scheme’s brand with the new entrant’s brand.
This would allow consumers to choose between brands when paying (provided the
merchant accepts both brands), taking into consideration possible bonuses from
their issuing PSP (air miles, etc.) and the possible incentives from the
merchant (surcharging, rebating, steering). It is not clear at this stage whether and if so, to what extent the
rules of existing schemes allow brands that now also compete with them in
national markets to figure on the same card. Schemes may also impose reporting
requirements or charges on issuers and acquirers for transactions carried out
with cards carrying their brand, even if their brand is not used in those
transactions. The SEPA Cards Framework has a rule on the basis of which the
issuing PSP, in consultation with the consumer, can pre-select the brand to be
used on a co-badged card at the point of sale. Therefore, co-badging could also
raise competition issues if it is used to restrict or unduly influence the
choice of the brand and/or payment instrument. For the time being the co-badging
issue is limited to cards but in the future it will increasingly apply to
mobile payments. Questions 6) What are the potential benefits and/or drawbacks of
co-badging? Are there any potential restrictions to co-badging that are
particularly problematic? If you can, please quantify the magnitude of the
problem. Should restrictions on co-badging by schemes be addressed and, if so,
in which form? 7) When a co-badged payment instrument is used, who should
take the decision on prioritisation of the instrument to be used first? How
could this be implemented in practice?
4.1.4.
Separating card schemes and card payment
processing
Some card schemes have subsidiaries that process the transactions
and are in a position to impose the use of this subsidiary on scheme
participants. This constitutes an entry barrier to processors and new card
schemes which could be overcome by effectively separating card scheme management
from card payment processing entities. Separation would therefore increase competition
between card schemes and between processors and would allow banks to
participate in only one compliant infrastructure. The SEPA Cards Framework
(SCF) provides for separation between scheme management and processing but does
not lay down specific arrangements. The result of the current lack of a common interoperability
framework is a segmented card processing market. The technical and business
procedures for clearing and/or settling payments between banks that use
different infrastructures therefore need to be improved. The development of
scheme independent processing standards would also aid the implementation of
separation between scheme and processing entities. Questions 8) Do you think that bundling scheme and processing entities
is problematic, and if so why? What is the magnitude of the problem? 9) Should any action be taken on this? Are you in favour
of legal separation (i.e. operational separation, although ownership would
remain with the same holding company) or ‘full ownership unbundling’?
4.1.5.
Access to settlement systems
In contrast to banks, payment institutions as defined by Directive
2007/64/EC on payment services in the internal market (PSD)[17] and e-money institutions do
not have direct access to clearing and settlement systems. Under Article 2(b)
of the Settlement Finality Directive (SFD), only credit institutions and
investment firms may participate in designated settlement systems. As a result,
other PSPs claim to be unable to compete with banks on an equal basis as they
are obliged to use the services of a bank to settle payments. Questions 10) Is non-direct access to clearing and settlement systems
problematic for payment institutions and e-money institutions and if so what is
the magnitude of the problem? 11) Should a common cards-processing framework laying down
the rules for SEPA card processing (i.e. authorisation, clearing and
settlement) be set up? Should it lay out terms and fees for access to card
processing infrastructures under transparent and non-discriminatory criteria?
Should it tackle the participation of Payment Institutions and E-money
Institutions in designated settlement systems? Should the SFD and/or the PSD be
amended accordingly?
4.1.6.
Compliance with the SEPA Cards Framework (SCF)
The SCF developed by the EPC was not fully implemented on 1 January
2011, as originally scheduled, as many of its underlying elements are not
actively applied. The SCF’s potential impact is not limited to payments in euro.
Whilst the SCF covers general purpose cards used to make payments and cash
withdrawals in euro throughout the SEPA area, PSPs and schemes operating in
non-euro SEPA countries have an incentive to be SCF compliant in order to be
able to handle euro transactions. Under the SCF, non SEPA-compliant incumbent
payment schemes for euro transactions will in principle be phased out of the
market. This implies that non-compliant schemes will disappear after full SCF
implementation. The SCF defines obligations for cards to be SEPA compliant:
card payments must be guaranteed by the issuing PSP and the EMV (Chip and PIN)
standards implemented in full. These technical requirements also impact/limit
the business models to be applied in the European Union with the advantage that
for the systems that are allowed, a single integrated European market is
created. Questions 12) What is your opinion on the content and market impact
(products, prices, terms and conditions) of the SCF? Is the SCF sufficient to
drive market integration at EU level? Are there any areas that should be
reviewed? Should non-compliant schemes disappear after full SCF implementation,
or is there a case for their survival?
4.1.7.
Information on the availability of funds
In many business models for payment services, prior information on
the availability of funds — necessary for authorisation and/or payment
guarantee of a specific payment transaction — is a key element. As keepers of the
bank account, banks have a ‘gateway function’ that effectively determines the viability
of many business models. Even if for certain new payment services consumers
would agree that information on the availability of funds on their bank account
is given to payment service providers of their choice, banks may refuse to give
other payment service providers access to this information. Given the
importance of secure payments and confidence in the payment system in general
and the fact that banks are subject to supervision, such refusals may be
justified in some cases. However, it creates a conflict of interest for banks, which
may have an incentive to refuse to cooperate, despite the willingness of their
customers. This could unduly hinder the emergence of safe and efficient
alternative payment solutions, even if they are subject to prudential
requirements. Questions 13) Is there a need to give non-banks access to information
on the availability of funds in bank accounts, with the agreement of the
customer, and if so what limits would need to be placed on such information? Should
action by public authorities be considered, and if so, what aspects should it
cover and what form should it take?
4.1.8.
Dependence on payment card transactions
Worldwide, card use continues to grow. Global transaction volumes rose
by 9.7 % between 2009 and 2010. Cards remain the preferred non-cash
payment instrument, with a market share of more than 40 % in most markets[18]. Given the increasing use of
payment cards, including in the e-commerce world, it is likely that there will
be a growing number of companies whose activities are effectively dependent on
being able to accept payments by card. In that case, the question arises
whether it is in the public interest to define objective rules describing the
circumstances and procedures under which card payment schemes may unilaterally
refuse acceptance. Questions 14) Given the increasing use of payment cards, do you think that
there are companies whose activities depend on their ability to accept payments
by card? Please give concrete examples of companies and/or sectors. If so, is
there a need to set objective rules addressing the behaviour of payment service
providers and payment card schemes vis-à-vis dependent users?
4.2.
Transparent and cost-effective pricing of
payment services for consumers, retailers and other businesses
The real cost of these payment services is often opaque, both for
consumers and for merchants, which leads to higher payment costs in the EU
economy. The lack of transparency mostly applies to the cards market, but links
between cards, e- and m-payments have implications for all these payment
methods. Furthermore, increased transparency in pricing should be seen as a way
to reduce the costs of payment transactions for all parties involved and
ultimately optimise costs across the EU for the benefit of payment service
users. Another issue related to the pricing of payment services concerns
micro-payments, i.e. low-value payments, which by their nature are often made
by card, internet or mobile payments. Payment fees are often perceived as
excessive, both by consumers and merchants because they usually represent a
significantly higher share of the transaction value than is the case for
large-value payments. This situation may have contributed to the development of
alternative digital currencies.
4.2.1.
Consumer — merchant relationship: transparency
Consumers are seldom aware of the full cost of using specific
payment instruments, i.e. the costs that are not only imposed on them directly,
but also on the payees (merchants). If the cost of using different payment
instruments (e.g. different card brands, cash, cheques) is the same for
consumers, they tend to believe that their choice of payment method is
irrelevant to the merchant. Consequently, consumers base their selection of a payment
instrument either on convenience or on potential benefits they could otherwise obtain
by using a specific method of payment. However, the payment instrument chosen by the consumer may not be optimal
in terms of the full cost to the economy. Merchants typically include their
transaction costs in the prices of goods and services they offer. The end
result is that all consumers pay more for their purchases in order to cover the
real cost of more expensive payment methods used by some. Making the total cost of using different payment instruments more transparent
could therefore drive down total payment costs in the economy. This could be
achieved by providing information to the consumer on how much the use and/or
handling of a particular payment instrument costs the merchant. In this
context, it would be important to assess the likely impact of greater transparency
on consumer behaviour, focusing on better understanding consumers’ reactions and
their needs. Questions 15) Should merchants inform consumers about the fees they
pay for the use of various payment instruments? Should payment service
providers be obliged to inform consumers of the Merchant Service Charge (MSC)
charged / the MIF income received from customer transactions? Is this
information relevant for consumers and does it influence their payment choices?
4.2.2.
Consumer — merchant relationship: rebates, surcharging and other steering
practices
Another option to increase the transparency of pricing in the
consumer-merchant relations and to stimulate the use of the most efficient
payment instruments could be the systematic and comprehensive use of rebates,
surcharging and other steering practices (e.g. selective acceptance of certain
cards only above a certain amount, explicit indication of the preferred means
of payment) by the merchant. This could create incentives to use the most
efficient payment means. In accordance with the ‘user pays’ principle, costs
should in principle be borne by those who use a specific service and not
distributed between a wider group. It is also justified to consider the potential abuse which could
arise from surcharging, such as the lack of transparency and the lack of
practical alternative payment instruments to avoid paying a surcharge[19]. This has been a particular
issue in certain economic sectors (e.g. the airline industry). Surcharging should
not be used as an additional revenue source by merchants but should be limited
to the real cost of using a payment instrument, as established in Article 19 of
the Consumer Rights Directive[20]. Article 52(3) of the PSD explicitly empowers merchants to use
surcharging and rebating for the use of a given payment instrument[21]. However, Member States may
still prohibit or limit surcharging (but not rebating) under certain conditions.
Member States have chosen to apply this provision in starkly different ways in their
territories. Differing national choices significantly increase the complexity
of the Single Market and generate confusion for both consumers and merchants,
in particular in cross-border transactions. Questions 16) Is there a need to further harmonise rebates, surcharges
and other steering practices across the European Union for card, internet and
m-payments? If so, in what direction should such harmonisation go? Should, for
instance: – certain methods (rebates, surcharging, etc.) be encouraged,
and if so how? – surcharging be generally authorised, provided that
it is limited to the real cost of the payment instrument borne by the merchant? – merchants be asked to accept one, widely used, cost-effective
electronic payment instrument without surcharge? – specific rules apply to micro-payments and, if
applicable, to alternative digital currencies?
4.2.3.
Merchant — payment service provider relationship
Transparency in pricing the payment instruments and the real costs
of payment transactions could also be improved by addressing the merchant–payment
service provider relationship. Some rules applied by card schemes currently make it difficult for
merchants to influence consumer decisions on the choice of a payment instrument
and limit their own ability to accept only selected cards. This facilitates the
application of high MIFs by PSPs, hence potentially increasing the cost of card
payments and stifling competition. The rules in question are: –
No Discrimination Rule (NDR), under which
retailers are prohibited from directing their customers towards the use of the
payment instrument they prefer through surcharging, offering rebates or other
forms of steering. –
Honour All Cards (HAC) Rule, under which
merchants are obliged to accept all cards within the same brand, even if the
fees related to them are not the same[22]. –
Blending practices, applied by card acquirers.
As a result of blending only an average fee for card payments is charged to
merchants by their acquirers and the merchant is not informed about the MSCs
applied for the various individual categories of cards. Changes in the card scheme rules and in practices of the acquirers
could give merchants more power when negotiating with acquiring PSPs, in
particular at MSC level, whilst at the same time improving the ability of
merchants to influence consumers’ decisions. It could drive down the cost of
card payments in the economy and increase the chances of new, competing schemes
getting accepted by merchants. Questions 17) Could changes in the card scheme and acquirer rules
improve the transparency and facilitate cost-effective pricing of payment
services? Would such measures be effective on their own or would they require
additional flanking measures? Would such changes require additional checks and balances
or new measures in the merchant-consumer relations, so that consumer rights are
not affected? Should three-party schemes be covered? Should a distinction be
drawn between consumer and commercial cards? Are there specific requirements
and implications for micro-payments?
4.3.
Standardisation
European payment users (companies,
consumers, merchants) will fully benefit from competition, freedom of choice
and more efficient payment operations if cross-border interoperability is
achieved. This applies to all electronic payments and involves multiple actors
in the payment process, depending on the payment method. However, standardisation
of the various components (e.g. protocols, interfaces, applications, services) needs
to be carried out thoroughly[23]
in order to minimise the risk of foreclosure of potential competitors or innovation. Card payments As described above, a card payment involves
data exchange between the acquiring and issuing PSP (A2I domain) but also
between the merchant (potentially by means of a physical payment terminal)
and the acquiring PSP (T2A domain). In the T2A domain, there is a lack of common
standards across borders and in many cases even domestically. There are a few private
initiatives setting technical specifications, such as the EPAS (Electronic
Protocol Application Software) and the C-TAP (Common Terminal Acquirer
Protocol). However, these projects often develop in isolation and in different
directions, driven by diverging commercial interests. The fragmented
standardisation work has a threefold effect. First, the lack of common
standards limits the range of potential service providers to domestic acquiring
PSPs and therefore hampers the achievement of a competitive Single Market for
payment services. Second, merchants have to maintain different systems and
protocols for managing data exchange in the acquiring process — at least one
for each country they operate in, but in many cases even more, thereby reducing
the opportunities to centralise operations and limiting efficiency gains. Third,
the lack of common standards in the T2A domain often prevents debit cards from
being accepted abroad — a consumer experience which is not in line with the
Single Market and a common currency for cash payments in the Member States of
the euro area. In the A2I domain, the situation is
similarly unsatisfactory. Inter-bank payment processing (authorisation,
clearing and settling of transactions) is currently based on different rules of
individual card schemes. Full separation of scheme and processing (see 4.1.4)
will require scheme interoperability standards for A2I processing. Industry-driven
standardisation efforts in A2I area are currently limited and have not yet
achieved much traction across all market actors. A third issue concerns certification. For each
country and card scheme, there are different criteria and evaluation procedures
for the mandatory certification of chip cards, payment terminals etc. These certification
procedures are crucial to ensure payment security but because they are not
harmonised across Europe they result in excessive cost redundancies for card
and terminal manufacturers. The market-driven OSeC (Open Standards for Security
and Certification) and CAS (Common Approval Scheme) initiatives were launched
to address this issue. While initial progress has been promising, the
initiatives have yet to yield tangible results in the marketplace. The EPC has set up an overarching Cards
Stakeholder Group (CSG) with representatives from key sectors, i.e. merchants,
card payment processors, card schemes, PSPs and technical providers. The CSG is
developing a SEPA Cards standardisation volume, a fifth version of which was
published in December 2010. The aim of the volume is harmonisation of SEPA
standards so that ‘any SEPA card could technically work at any SEPA terminal’
and to promote harmonised certification procedures and standards. However, at
this stage it has produced limited concrete results in terms of creating a
genuine integrated market for cards. E- and m-payments In October 2010, the EPC and the global
association of mobile operators GSMA published a paper outlining the roles
and responsibilities of mobile operators and banks in the management of contact-less
applications[24].
The banking/card sector and mobile network operators have thus initiated
discussions on cooperation and standardisation. Nevertheless, tangible results
have yet to be achieved and several important gaps still need to be filled to
achieve a stable ecosystem built on coherent m-payment business models that
work across borders. Standardisation work on m-payments should
ensure full interoperability between m-payment solutions and favour open
standards to enable consumer mobility. In addition, given the specificity of
m-payments, standardisation should address the issue of portability of m‑payment
applications (i.e. how payment applications follow consumers when they change mobile
network operators). The lack of common standards seems to be
less of an issue for e-payments. This is partly due to the use of the internet
as a common platform with defined communication protocols. Even if initiated in
the internet, e-payments are then often processed as regular card payments or
through online-banking platforms. They are therefore negatively affected more by
a lack of inter-operability between actors in the payment process chain (see
4.4.) than by a lack of standards.Finally, standardisation should also ensure that
e- and m-payment solutions offered to consumers are easy to access and
user-friendly. Questions 18) Do you agree that the use of common standards for card
payments would be beneficial? What are the main gaps, if any? Are there other specific
aspects of card payments, other than the three mentioned above (A2I, T2A,
certification), which would benefit from more standardisation? 19) Are the current governance arrangements sufficient to
coordinate, drive and ensure the adoption and implementation of common
standards for card payments within a reasonable timeframe? Are all
stakeholder groups properly represented? Are there specific ways by which
conflict resolution could be improved and consensus finding accelerated? 20) Should European standardisation bodies, such as the European Committee for Standardisation (Comité européen de
normalisation, CEN) or the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI),
play a more active role in standardising card payments? In which area do you
see the greatest potential for their involvement and what are the potential
deliverables? Are there other new or existing bodies that could facilitate standardisation
for card payments? 21) On e- and m-payments, do you see specific areas in which
more standardisation would be crucial to support fundamental principles, such
as open innovation, portability of applications and interoperability? If so, which? 22) Should European standardisation bodies, such as CEN or
ETSI, play a more active role in standardising e- or m-payments? In which area
do you see the greatest potential for their involvement and what are the
potential deliverables?
4.4.
Interoperability between service providers
Cooperation is a key requirement in a
network industry such as payments, as any payment requires an agreement between
the payer’s payment service provider and the payee’s payment service provider. To
ensure that any payment can reach any beneficiary without detriment to the
actors and intermediaries involved, a higher level of coordination is desirable
in the form of full interoperability. In line with the Commission’s proposal for
credit transfers and direct debits, the principle of interoperability could be applied
in the cards market, in addition to addressing the obstacles mentioned above,
particularly for the choice of the acquirer and the commercial rules.
4.4.1.
Interoperability in the domain of m-payments
The mobile payment market in Europe is
still in its infancy. One of the main barriers to widespread take-up of
m-payments seems to be a stalemate between Mobile Network Operators (MNOs),
traditional PSPs (banks) and other players, such as manufacturers or
application developers. MNOs seem to be seeking to retain control of the business,
at least in their role of security manager for the service. At the same time, e-payment
players are seeking to extend their reach to the mobile environment (for both
remote and proximity payments). It seems likely that private players controlling
the standards and, hence interoperability, will dominate the whole payment
chain: the device itself, the application platform and security management. In
this situation, there is a serious risk of fragmentation through proprietary
solutions. In addition, the importance of other sectors potentially involved in
interoperability without playing a leading role in the standardisation strategy
should not be overlooked, such as public transport (payments for ticketing) or health
(health insurance card-based payments) sectors.
4.4.2.
Interoperability in the domain of e-payments
The EPC has decided against setting up its own online banking
scheme, proposing instead to formulate an interoperability framework that
allows competition between various schemes and enables individual banks to
decide which scheme to join. For the time being, no non-bank service providers
have been allowed to join this work[25].
Three bank-based schemes[26]
have undertaken a ‘proof of concept’ exercise to test interoperability between
schemes. It is too soon to ascertain whether this project could be successfully
scaled up to an EU wide scheme. At the same time, EBA Clearing, a clearing and settlement operator
with close to 70 shareholder banks, has announced an online-banking based
e-payment initiative. A pilot scheme is expected to be launched in May 2012.
4.4.3.
Interoperability and competition
Technical interoperability should be distinguished from commercial interoperability,
i.e. the ability for merchants to choose acquirers and for customers to choose
issuers irrespective of their location. It is also important to address the
challenges of interoperability in three-party schemes as compared to four-party
schemes. Questions 23) Is there currently any segment in the payment chain
(payer, payee, payee’s PSP, processor, scheme, payer’s PSP) where
interoperability gaps are particularly prominent? How should they be addressed?
What level of interoperability would be needed to avoid fragmentation of the
market? Can minimum requirements for interoperability, in particular of
e-payments, be identified? 24) How could the current stalemate
on interoperability for m-payments and the slow progress on e-payments be
resolved? Are the current governance arrangements sufficient to coordinate,
drive and ensure interoperability within a reasonable timeframe? Are all
stakeholder groups properly represented? Are there specific ways by which
conflict resolution could be improved and consensus finding accelerated?
4.5.
Payments security
The security of retail payments is a
crucial prerequisite for payment users and merchants alike. Consumers are justifiably
alerted by frequent press coverage of fraud and data abuse incidents and are
therefore particularly sensitive to security issues for card and internet
payments. The public consultation on the future of e-commerce in the internal
market confirmed this and identified payments security as one of the key
hurdles preventing the widespread adoption of electronic commerce. Security requirements most importantly
concern the prevention of fraud. The continuous replacement of signature-based
cards (equipped with a magnetic stripe for card reading) by ‘Chip and PIN’ (EMV-compliant)
cards has helped reduce fraud significantly at the point-of-sale at European
level. At the end of 2010, around 90 % of all point-of-sale card terminals
and 80 % of all payment cards in the EU were EMV-compliant. While this
helped to drive down card fraud in physical payment transactions, fraudulent
activity is now increasingly moving to remote card transactions, in particular
to payments over the internet. Remote card transactions represent only a minor
share of all card transactions but already account for the majority of all
fraud cases. Non-card e-payments are also vulnerable to fraud. Potential
remedies for online banking or other internet payment transactions include what
is known as two-factor authentication, i.e. the use of a PIN in combination
with a one-time transaction code received through an SMS or token device, for
example. However, the trade-off between security, speed and ease of use should
be taken into account. A second important issue in this field is data
protection. All payment means referred to in this document imply the processing
of personal data and the use of electronic communication networks. Sensitive
customer information should stay within a secure payment infrastructure, both
in terms of processing and storing data. Directives 95/46/EC[27] and 2002/58/EC[28] lay down the legal framework
applicable to the processing of personal data in the EU and govern processing
activities carried out in this context by different actors involved in a
payment operation. This is a key responsibility for all market actors involved
in the payment transaction. It is crucial that authentication mechanisms for payment
transactions are designed from the outset to include the necessary measures to ensure
compliance with data protection requirements. The number of parties having access
to authentication data during or after a payment transaction should be
restricted to those who are strictly necessary to perform the transaction. Furthermore, an
integrated market for secure internet payments could potentially facilitate the
fight against websites offering illegal content or selling counterfeited
products. Subject to appropriate pre-established
procedures, PSPs could be required to refuse executing financial transactions
on websites which have previously been identified as illegal. Questions 25) Do you think that physical transactions, including those
with EMV-compliant cards and proximity m-payments, are sufficiently secure? If
not, what are the security gaps and how could they be addressed? 26) Are additional security requirements (e.g. two-factor
authentication or the use of secure payment protocols) required for remote
payments (with cards, e-payments or m-payments)? If so, what specific
approaches/technologies are most effective? 27) Should payment security be underpinned by a regulatory
framework, potentially in connection with other digital authentication
initiatives? Which categories of market actors should be subject to such a
framework? 28) What are the most appropriate mechanisms to ensure the
protection of personal data and compliance with the legal and technical
requirements laid down by EU law??
5.
Strategy implementation/governance
5.1.
Governance of SEPA
Until now, SEPA has been predominantly run
as a self-regulatory project, set up and managed by the European
banking industry through the EPC, with the strong support of the ECB and the
Commission. The EPC plenary is responsible for managing the SEPA schemes and
its frameworks, and for introducing new rules or changes to these schemes and
frameworks. As regards EPC membership, in addition to banks, currently one seat
is given to payment institutions but other payment service providers,
processors, supply-side market actors (e.g. software vendors, terminal
manufacturers) and users are not represented. To improve stakeholder involvement in the
governance of SEPA at EU level, the Commission and the ECB jointly set up a
high-level governing body, the ‘SEPA Council’, in March 2010. It brings
together high-level representatives from the demand and the supply side of the
payments market. Its objective is to promote the achievement of an integrated
euro retail payments market and to build consensus on the next steps towards completing
SEPA. It has no legislative powers and cannot impose binding provisions. With the adoption of the Regulation
establishing technical requirements for credit transfers and direct debits in
euros a more active involvement of the EU institutions in the SEPA governance
may be useful. In this context, a more prominent role for the legislative and
regulatory oversight through, for example, the ECB, the Commission or the European
Banking Authority (EBA) could be considered. Questions 29) How do you assess the current SEPA governance
arrangements at EU level? Can you identify any weaknesses, and if so, do you
have any suggestions for improving SEPA governance? What overall balance would you
consider appropriate between a regulatory and a self-regulatory approach?
Do you agree that European regulators and supervisors should play a more active
role in driving the SEPA project forward?
5.2.
Governance in the field of cards, m-payments and
e-payments
To improve stakeholder involvement, the EPC
has set up the Customer Stakeholders Forum (dealing with the SEPA Credit
Transfer and the SEPA Direct Debit) and the Cards Stakeholders Group (dealing
with card payments). Both of these bodies are co-chaired by the EPC and
representatives of end-users. On the self regulatory side, although it merits further
clarification, the SEPA Cards Framework (SCF) adopted by the EPC — with the
status of a voluntary code of conduct — defines the principles and
conditions banks, processors and card schemes must follow to be SCF or SEPA
compliant. However, and in spite of a strong incentive for operators willing to
accept payments in euro to move to SEPA compliance, the SCF does not have the
unanimous support of all stakeholders and there is no formal mechanism to
interpret, monitor and enforce SEPA compliance for card schemes nor to settle
any potential disputes. In areas such as creating a proper
framework for e- and m-payments, integration efforts have been slow to produce tangible
results, thereby delaying interoperability, innovation, increased choice and
scale effects. Deadlocks and uncertainties may lead to market participants
taking a ‘wait and see’ attitude. Given the current lack of commitment to such
an important initiative for the European economy as a whole, achieving an
integrated market requires taking a comprehensive approach involving regulation,
self-regulation and competition law compliance and enforcement. Questions 30) How should current governance aspects of standardisation
and interoperability be addressed? Is there a need to increase involvement of
stakeholders other than banks and if so, how (e.g. public consultation,
memorandum of understanding by stakeholders, giving the SEPA Council a role to issue
guidance on certain technical standards, etc.)? Should it be left to market
participants to drive market integration EU-wide and, in particular, decide
whether and under which conditions payment schemes in non-euro currencies should
align themselves with existing payment schemes in euro? If not, how could this
be addressed? 31) Should there be a role for public authorities, and if so
what? For instance, could a memorandum of understanding between the
European public authorities and the EPC identifying a time-schedule/work plan
with specific deliverables (‘milestones’) and specific target dates be
considered?
6.
General remarks
Questions 32) This paper addresses specific aspects related to the
functioning of the payments market for card, e- and m-payments. Do you think any
important issues have been omitted or under-represented?
7.
Next steps
All interested parties are invited to
submit their views in response to the above questions. Contributions should be
sent to the following address to reach the Commission by 11 April 2012
at the latest: markt-sepa@ec.europa.eu. Contributions do not need to cover all
questions raised in this Green Paper. Accordingly, please indicate clearly the
questions to which your contribution relates. If possible, please give specific
arguments for or against the options and approaches presented in the paper. As a follow-up to this Green Paper and on
the basis of the responses received, the Commission will announce the next
steps by the second quarter of 2012. Proposals, if applicable, will be adopted
by the fourth quarter of 2012 or the first quarter of 2013. Any future
legislative or non-legislative proposal will be accompanied by an extensive
impact assessment. Contributions will be published on the
internet. It is important to read the specific privacy statement accompanying
this Green Paper for information on how your personal data and contribution
will be dealt with. Annex 1: Use of different payment
instruments Graph 1:
Non-cash payments in the EU — volume by payment instrument
Source: ECB, Comparative tables, Retail
transactions Table 1: Card payments in the EU (2009) Member State || Number of payment cards issued per capita || Number of card transactions per capita[29] || Average value of card transaction per card (EUR) || Number of POS transactions per card[30] || Annual value of POS transactions per card (EUR) Belgium || 1.78 || 92 || 55 || 52 || 2 843 Germany || 1.54 || 30 || 64 || 20 || 1 247 Estonia || 1.37 || 116 || 17 || 85 || 1 405 Ireland || 1.22 || 72 || 73 || 56 || 4 237 Greece || 1.35 || 8 || 101 || 5 || 487 Spain || 1.62 || 47 || 46 || 27 || 1 234 France || 1.35 || 107 || 49 || 80 || 3 905 Italy || 1.15 || 24 || 80 || 22 || 1 788 Cyprus || 1.54 || 40 || 87 || 25 || 2 072 Luxembourg || 2.00 || 109 || 76 || 57 || 4 166 Malta || 1.55 || 27 || 63 || 18 || 1 108 Netherlands || 1.83 || 125 || 42 || 68 || 2 902 Austria || 1.24 || 46 || 63 || 28 || 1 395 Portugal || 1.89 || 100 || 39 || 53 || 2 060 Slovenia || 1.66 || 54 || 37 || 32 || 1 187 Slovakia || 0.94 || 21 || 57 || 15 || 596 Finland || 1.74 || 172 || 34 || 100 || 3 402 Euro area sub-total || 1.45 || 58 || 52 || 40 || 2 066 Bulgaria || 1.01 || 2 || 78 || 2 || 138 Czech Republic || 0.89 || 17 || 38 || 21 || 813 Denmark || 1.25 || 180 || 47 || 129 || 5 875 Latvia || 1.10 || 43 || 20 || 37 || 698 Lithuania || 1.29 || 28 || 18 || 22 || 384 Hungary || 0.88 || 18 || 27 || 21 || 1 028 Poland || 0.87 || 18 || 25 || 21 || 539 Romania || 0.60 || 4 || 39 || 7 || 251 Sweden || 1.85 || 182 || 40 || 89 || 2 735 United Kingdom || 2.33 || 132 || 58 || 56 || 3 294 Total EU27 || 1.45 || 63 || 52 || 43 || 2 194 Source: ECB
Payment Statistics, February 2011 Annex 2: Further background on MIFs A MIF can be a percentage, a flat fee or a
combined fee (percentage and flat fee). A wide variety of MIFs are applied in
the EU. Not all these fees are public. However, as a result of informal and
formal settlements with the European Commission MasterCard and Visa Europe currently
publish the MIFs they have established (in a number of countries MIFs are
established by local banking communities in the framework of the MasterCard and
Visa systems, under which fees are generally not made public). For MasterCard
and Visa Europe, depending on the category of cards and the country, MIFs vary
from zero (Maestro Switzerland) to 1.62 % (MasterCard debit cards Poland) and 1.90 % (Visa debit cards and
commercial cards in Poland). Under its informal settlement with the
Commission MasterCard has reduced its MIFs for cross-border consumer debit and
credit cards to 0.20 % and 0.30 % respectively. Visa Europe has
reduced its MIFs for cross border consumer debit card transactions and
transactions with these cards in nine EU Member States to 0.20 %. The
benchmark applied in these settlements as the so-called ‘merchant indifference
test’. Under this test the MIF is set at the level where payment with a card
does not result in higher costs to retailers than a payment with cash, making the
retailer indifferent between the two means of payment.
This level can therefore be seen as ensuring that merchants and their
subsequent customers receive some of the benefit of the efficiencies allegedly
generated by MIFs. In some instances competition authorities
have accepted formal or informal settlements on specific levels of inter-bank
fees and other conditions[31]. Four-party schemes and three-party
schemes MIFs
are applicable to point-of-sale transactions with payment cards i.e.
transactions made by the cardholder at the merchants’ business. In a four-party
scheme, the issuing PSP enters into a contract with the cardholder (payer) and
the merchant contracts an acquiring PSP (or payee PSP) to acquire the card
payments made at his terminal. For its services, the acquiring PSP charges the
merchant what is known as merchant service charges (MSC). Interchange fees for such schemes are fees charged
by the issuing PSP on transactions carried out with cards it has issued. The
cost of these fees is borne by the acquiring PSPs and then passed on to
merchants through inflated MSCs. The interchange fee therefore effectively
determines to a large extent the price charged by PSPs to merchants for card
acceptance. Hence, MIFs have an impact on price competition between acquiring
PSPs to the detriment of merchants and subsequent purchasers[32], particularly in combination
with other business practices outlined in 4.1 and 4.2 of this paper. Three-party card schemes, sometimes referred to as ‘proprietary’ schemes, differ from
four-party schemes as the transaction only involves the payer/cardholder, the
payee/merchant and the scheme, whereas in a four-party scheme, the transaction
involves the payer/cardholder, the issuing PSP (or payer PSP), the
payee/merchant and its PSP (the acquiring PSP or payee PSP). This means that
the schemes’ role is mostly limited to providing the infrastructure in the
latter case. In a three-party scheme, only one PSP is
involved, being at the same time the issuer and the acquirer. However, when licences
are issued by the scheme to several PSPs to issue cards and to acquire
transactions, it is not a ‘pure’ three-party scheme but resembles a four-party
system. ‘Pure’ three-party schemes do not have a
MIF explicitly agreed between PSPs. There are only the fees paid by the
cardholder (annual fees, fees per transaction, etc.) and Merchant Services
Charges paid by the retailer. Nevertheless, the scheme may use the collected
fee to subsidise one ‘leg’ or the other (i.e. the merchant or the cardholder),
resulting in an implicit MIF. [1] Retail payments are defined as payment transactions
where at least one party of the transaction (i.e. the payer, the beneficiary or
both) is not a financial institution. Hence, retail payments represent all
payment transactions which do not take place between two banks. [2] This is the result of complex fees between the
different payment service providers involved in the payment transaction and of
charges from the payment service provider to the merchant selling a good or
service. [3] Proposal for a Regulation establishing technical
requirements for credit transfers and direct debits in euros and amending
Regulation (EC) No 924/2009, COM(2010)775,
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:52010PC0775:EN:NOT. [4] Source: ECB Payment Statistics, February 2011. For
detailed country statistics see Annex 1. [5] These transactions can either be made directly
through the payer’s online banking system or via a third party (e.g. Ideal in
the Netherlands, Giropay and Sofortüberweisung in Germany or EPS in Austria). [6] http://www.forrester.com/ER/Press/Release/0,1769,1330,00.html [7] Euromonitor 2010 [8] http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/consultations/2010/e-commerce_en.htm [9] The Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) was developed by the Open
Mobile Alliance (OMA), a forum for industry stakeholders to agree on
common specifications for the mobile phone industry. A WAP browser is a
commonly used web browser for mobile phones. [10] http://www.europeanpaymentscouncil.eu/knowledge_bank_detail.cfm?documents_id=402
and http://www.europeanpaymentscouncil.eu/knowledge_bank_detail.cfm?documents_id=557
[11] Joint statement from the European Commission and the
European Central Bank, http://www.ecb.int/press/pr/date/2006/html/pr060504_1.en.html. [12] The annex includes in particular more details about the
analysis conducted by DG Competition under Article 101 §3 TFUE of the appropriate
level of MIF using the Merchant Indifference Test (MIT). [13] Australia, USA. [14] Decisions in Visa, MasterCard, Polish MasterCard
Decision, Hungarian MasterCard Decision, Italian MasterCard Decision. [15] Issuing banks may encourage the frequent use of the
card by offering additional benefits or rewards like travel insurances, payment
discounts or even by reimbursing a fraction of the price of purchased goods and
services. In some cases, consumers are also charged additional fees if they do
not pay with their cards frequently enough or do not spend a required amount of
money within a given period. [16] Commercial cards comprise three
main subcategories: (i) business cards, which are typically issued to small
business customers to whom — unlike in the case of consumer cards — no
additional services are provided, (ii) corporate cards, which are typically
issued to medium and large business customers to whom additional information
services are provided, and (iii) purchasing cards, which are used for
commercial purchases and often offer VAT related invoicing services. [17] Directive 2007/64/EC of the
European Parliament and of the Council of 13 November 2007 on payment services
in the internal market, OJ L 319, 5.12.2007, p. 1. [18] World Payments Report 2011, p. 10, CapGemini, RBS
and EFMA. [19] These reduce the extent to which consumers shop around and compare
full price offers, resulting in consumers detriment, according to the UK
Office of Fair Trading (OFT), ‘Payment surcharges — Response to the Which?
super-complaint’, June 2011. [20] Directive 2011/83/EU of the European Parliament and of
the Council of 25 October 2011 on consumer rights, OJ L304, 22.11.2011, p.
64 [21] However, the PSD does not apply to payments in cash or
by cheque. [22] In practice the HACR can be seen as two separate rules:
honour all issuers (e.g. if a merchant accepts Visa cards issued by local banks
it should also accept foreign cards); and honour all products (e.g. if a merchant
accepts consumer credit cards it must also accept more expensive commercial
cards). In general we do not see a problem with the honour all issuers rule,
but are concerned by the competitive impact of honour all products. [23] Part 7. Standardisation Agreements, Guidelines on
the applicability of Article 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the
European Union to horizontal cooperation agreements, OJ C 11/1, 14.1.2011. [24] http://www.europeanpaymentscouncil.eu/knowledge_bank_detail.cfm?documents_id=423 [25] The European Commission has opened a case regarding standardisation
in order ensure interoperability in the field of ePayments: http://ec.europa.eu/competition/elojade/isef/case_details.cfm?proc_code=1_39876
[26] iDEAL (Dutch), EPS (Austrian) and Giropay (German). [27] Directive 95/46/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of
24 October 1995 on the protection of individuals with regard to the processing
of personal data and on the free movement of such data, OJ L 281, 23.11.1995,
p. 31. [28] Directive 2002/58/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council
of 12 July 2002 concerning the processing of personal data and the protection
of privacy in the electronic communications sector (Directive on privacy and
electronic communications), OJ L 201, 31.7.2002, p. 37. [29] Excludes e-money card transactions. [30] Point-of-sale transactions; includes transactions at
terminals located in the Member State and outside it. [31] Visa, MasterCard, Pagobancomat, Groupement. [32] See the Commission's Decisions
addressed to MasterCard and Visa — Commission Decision of 19.12.2007 relating to a proceeding
under Article 81 of the EC Treaty and Article 53 of the EEA Agreement — Case
COMP/34.579 — MasterCard, Case COMP/36.518 — EuroCommerce, Case COMP/38.580 —
Commercial Cards; and Commission Decision of 8.12.2010 relating to proceedings
under Article 101 of the TFEU and Article 53 of the EEA Agreement — Case
COMP/39.398 — Visa MIF.