Title: Observatory on epayment systems
1Observatory on e-payment systems
Electronic Payment Systems Observatory
ePSO First Steering Group Brussels, November
21, 2000
Bernard Clements
2Study on e-payment systems for EP EMAC Questions
Does the lack of a safe and widespread electronic
payment system hamper the growth of electronic
commerce? Will monetary union speed-up
cross-border electronic commerce within the EU
and world-wide? What are the costs of
non-standardisation of electronic payment
systems? Should markets or regulators impose
future standards if necessary for electronic
payment systems? How to regulate issuers of
electronic money? How will electronic money
affect monetary policy-making?
3ePSO Organisation
4IPTS Institute for Prospective Technological
Studies - DG JRC - Seville
Presentation of Strategic and Technical Issues
Knud Boehle, Malte Krueger
5Scope of the issues covered
Electronic retail payment systems
Non-electronic payment systems
E-commerce
B2B
Real world
Wholesale-payment systems
6Issues 1-4
Electronic payments infrastructure
Non-electronic payment systems
B2B
e-moneyproducts
access products
micropayment systems
Wholesale-payment systems
7Issues 5-8
Policy makers regulation and innovation
Standardization and interoperability
Electronic retail payment systems
E-commerce
Real world
Consumers consumer protection, privacy, security
...
Merchants integration in online transactions
8Purpose of the issues selected...
- The issues try to identify those topics where
open debate, information exchange, knowledge of
best (and mal) practices - across groups of actors
- across sectors and
- across countries
- can lead to mutual learning processes, better
understanding, and to co-operative efforts to
enhance the efficiency of retail payments.
9 E-Money Issues
- Still questionable whether there is a clear
business case for e-purses - in the virtual and in the real world.
- Do internet payments and multi-application
smart cards enhance the - business case?
- many payment alternatives on the internet and at
the real POS - low demand for cross-border retail payments in
the real world - multi-application smart cards less suitable for
cross-border use - Who owns the card?
10 Enhanced Access Products
- Access products will benefit from cheaper and
faster online - connections and may prevail in the future.
- Integrated services such as home banking and
bill presentment - will influence the shape of future access
products. - The provision of integrated services will
provide new business opportunities for banks.
- Eventually, there will be real-time clearing
and settlement of - retail payments.
11 Micropayments
- There are many micropayment schemes (prepaid,
post-paid, - value points) but is there a large market for
micropayments? - subscriptions
- indirect income models
- free content
- What will be the role of non-banks in this
market? - Can value points develop into private
currencies - challenging - the current monetary order?
12 Infrastructure
- To what extent will there be competition
between networks? - Mobile phones as an alternative access
structure? - Mobile phone operators as (inter-)national
clearers? - What will be the role of non-banks in
e-payments? - When does such co-operation become collusion -
harming - consumers and merchants?
- Will the difference between national and
cross-border payments - vanish within the EMU area?
13 Regulation and Innovation e-money
- What will be the effect of the E-Money
Directive on payment - systems innovation?
- How does the directive affect the position of
Europe in the - global market for payment systems?
- To what extent is the directive applicable to
loyalty schemes, - barter schemes, etc.?
- How will the implementation process be shaped
by different - payment cultures?
- Alternative regulatory approaches
14Standardization and interoperability
- How large is the demand for cross-border
interoperability? - Economies of scale as an inducement to achieve
interoperability? - What will the migration paths to interoperable
systems look like? - The potential of bridging technologies.
- The role of CEPS.
- Interoperability of micropayment systems lack
of European - involvement?
15 Consumer Protection, Anonymity, Privacy and
Security
- Trust, security and privacy are important - but
how much are users - willing to pay?
- scalability of security
- low-cost secure solutions
- PKI the way to go, but
- Is a world-wide PKI a realistic option?
- Who will control the PKI?
- Interoperability of different PKI schemes.
- Is there sufficient demand for a cash-like
(person-to-person, - anonymous) e-money scheme?
16 Online Transaction Process
- What types of standards and frameworks are
relevant for - online transaction processes?
- Does the design of e-payment solutions have to
take these - standards and frameworks into account?
- To what extent do B2B standards influence B2C?
- If e-commerce moves towards either contractual
two party or trusted - third-party concepts - what would be the
implications for e-payments?
17ePSO Next Steps
- Forum How to complete the list of experts to
contact. - Steering Group Calendar.
- 22/5/01 draft analysis/review report
- 18/9/01 final analysis/review report
- 20/11/01 consensus conference
- Background Papers to Come.
- Mobile payment systems, Innovative new payment
systems