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The development of stored-value card payment systems
Now
may be a good time to review how Hong Kongˇ¦s electronic money system
should develop.
While there are lessons on governance and risk management to be
learned by Octopus and others from the failure of add-value
transactions through EPS, it is becoming increasingly clear that
whether there is a need for separation of the management of the
platform and the issue of stored-value cards is an important issue
to be considered and debated.
What
the community clearly wants is the convenience of paying for as wide
a range of goods and services as possible with the simple waving of
a card on location. They probably do not mind paying a reasonable
sum for that convenience, although obviously they would prefer not
to have to. This payment could be in the form of interest forgone for the
amount stored in the card, just as they have to forgo interest on
the cash they otherwise would have to carry.
The
community obviously also wants a card that is reliable and offers
adequate protection of their financial interests. They probably do
not mind choosing between different stored-value cards, if offered a
choice, to suit their own preferences. For example, some people
might want to use one card for multiple non-financial purposes,
while others might be more interested in the convenience of
uploading money easily and safely into the card from their bank
accounts. Some might even like to have a variety of stored-value
cards, as a new way of demonstrating economic status. Indeed,
as a way of showing whether you have money, stored-value cards are arguably
superior to credit cards because the latter involve borrowing money,
although holding many credit cards at least shows that you are
credit worthy.
But
the community probably would not like, having chosen a card, to be
forced to shop at certain locations, or travel only on certain
buses, because only they had debiting facilities for that card.
Similarly, providers of goods and services would obviously prefer to
install just one card reader rather than several. In other words,
there should ideally be just one common platform for a number of
stored-value cards, both for the convenience of users and the
efficiency of the system.
There is obviously a need for public debate and policy deliberation
before these early views can be confirmed, modified or indeed
rebutted, and new policy established if necessary. Leaving it as
far as possible to the free market, which has been our approach, has
produced a kind of monopoly in the provision of the platform for
debiting value and in the issue of a multi-purpose stored-value
card, in the form of Octopus, which despite its recent problems,
has been very successful. It is of course possible that the lack of
competition itself contributed to these problems, but the fact
remains that what we now have in Hong Kong has the potential to be
the most efficient electronic money system in the world. Perhaps
the answer is to introduce competition into the card-issuing part of
the business, while allowing the current single and common platform
to develop and possibly expand into an essential piece of the
infrastructure of our retail payment system. I have no
pre-conceived idea on the ownership and management of the common
platform, provided that there are adequate checks and balances,
transparently observed and monitored, to protect the public
interest.
While I am sure there will be many useful opinions expressed about
various matters arising from the failure of EPS uploading of Octopus-card balances, perhaps this is also a good opportunity to consider
whether to take a bold step forward.ˇ@
Joseph Yam
30 August 2007
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for previous articles in this column.
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