An Experiment on Retail Payments Systems
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Date
2014-05-05
Author
Camera, Gabriele
Casari, Marco
Bortolotti, Stefania
SAFE No.
49
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Abstract
We study the behavioral underpinnings of adopting cash versus electronic payments in retail transactions. A novel theoretical and experimental framework is developed to primarily assess the impact of sellers’ service fees and buyers’ rewards from using electronic payments. Buyers and sellers face a coordination problem, independently choosing a payment method before trading. In the experiment, sellers readily adopt electronic payments but buyers do not. Eliminating service fees or introducing rewards significantly boosts the adoption of electronic payments. Hence, buyers’ incentives play a pivotal role in the diffusion of electronic payments but monetary incentives cannot fully explain their adoption choices. Findings from this experiment complement empirical findings based on surveys and field data.
Research Area
Macro Finance
Keywords
money, coordination, pricing, transactions
JEL Classification
E1, E4, E5
Topic
Household Finance
Monetary Policy
Investor Behaviour
Monetary Policy
Investor Behaviour
Relations
1
Publication Type
Working Paper
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- LIF-SAFE Working Papers [334]