Credit and Debit Card Processing in the US ๐Ÿ’ณ

Process: Issuing bank ๐Ÿฆ โ€”> customer ๐Ÿ’ต hands information to payment gateway ๐Ÿšชโ€”> payment processor ๐Ÿญ handle the rest of the transaction details โ€”> card network ๐ŸŒ authorises credit โ€”> acquiring bank ๐Ÿฆ pays merchant ๐Ÿ’ผ

How it works?

  • Many middlemen between customer and merchant charges fee = merchants lose ~ $3 in a typical $100 transaction ๐Ÿ’ธ

Disruption possibilities ๐Ÿš€

  • Bypass system entirely, e.g. Kenyaโ€™s M-Pesa and Chinaโ€™s Alipay
  • Reduce middlemen/edit existing system, e.g. Apple Card
  • Re-imagine the economic distribution, e.g. pay back consumer based on fees received
  • New credit cards โ€“ e.g. for children
  • Corporatisation of credit cards/Payments or Fintech as a service - e.g. Railsbank
  • Efficiency generating/adjacent technologies, e.g. measuring customer sentiment/optimising conversion etc.
  • Cross-border disruption ๐ŸŒ

Verdict โš–๏ธ

Disruption is inevitable. ๐ŸŽ‰

  • Obvious and large pain points with tech solutions

Key is: what form the disruption will take? ๐Ÿ”‘
Element #1: What are we replacing?

  • Historically, the credit/debit card system in the US replaced cash.
  • Vs In China, they replaced cash with e-wallets.
  • What disrupts the credit/debit system will replace credit cards in a settled and comfortable economy
  • This replacement will need to serve the same functions and provide the same perks with less cost.
  • Whilst some of this might come from reducing middlemen, we will still need to eventually make cuts to perks, as they (and the entire system) are funded by middlemen fees.
  • = New revenue streams will need to be found.
  • ๐Ÿ’ก However, can be noted that credit/debit is more obsolete, and so doesnโ€™t need to be replaced?
  • On-demand age moves us further away from need of credit for unnecessary costs. FinTech solutions turn large expenses into smaller, more regular transactions.
  • Additionally, credit/debit cards provide one function, whereas weโ€™re moving towards conglomeration and the โ€œeverythingโ€ app.

Element #2: How are we replacing? ๐Ÿ›

  • Technical and governmental infrastructure required for current debit/credit card system means any replacement has to deal with that entrenched interest against changing.
  • It also means that any replacement that doesnโ€™t re-use the existing system (in novel ways), short of bypassing it, will be limited in ability to disrupt it.
  • That said, to bypass it entirely, infrastructure is required that may not exist in the West. China has ID cards to track all citizens, Indiaโ€™s government has a banking tech stack that provides infrastructure. ๐Ÿ—

Element #3: Trust enabling? ๐Ÿค

  • Consumer behaviours is not to be understated. Consider HK ๐Ÿ‡ญ๐Ÿ‡ฐ vs Shenzhen ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ณ โ€“ one is a near cashless society, whilst the other, despite being the same country and having similar resources to expansion is still very much a cash society. Reasons include a comfortable populace with little reason to โ€˜riskโ€™ moving onto a new system.

Element #4: Market dynamics

  • Incumbents will play a role. Increasing fragmentation, e.g. penetration into China is unlikely.
  • ๐ŸคฏInterestingly, this suggests different middlemen, but that they will not be as reduced as we make them out to be.
  • Politics will also continue to play a role โ€“ payments are still international, and tensions are still high. ๐Ÿฅต But note that China has a strong hold on Asia and Africa.

๐ŸŽฏ Key Question: what is the credit/debit card to the target consumer of the start-up? What is the solution?

Cheers,
Denise ๐Ÿค˜

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