As featured in The Wall Street Journal, Money Magazine, and more!
      1 comment 1

GAO Report Seems to Back Up Convenience Stores

by Smithee on November 24, 2009. Filed under Consumer.

We told you back in July about the Credit Card Fair Fee Act of 2009. To summarize: Visa and Mastercard skims a percentage of the retail price every time you use a card to buy something. It’s called an “interchange fee”. Allegedly, U.S. merchants pay up to six times more for this service than merchants in other countries, and are unable to negotiate fees.

Generally, this sort of scenario is called a monopoly, but so far the arguments I’ve seen for and against have avoided that word, probably because Visa and Mastercard are different companies. Duopoly, maybe?

Anyway, lawmakers asked the Government Accountability Office to review the options on the table, namely:

  • setting or limiting interchange fees
  • requiring their disclosure to consumers
  • prohibiting card networks from imposing rules on merchants that limit their ability to steer customers away from higher-cost cards; and

  • granting antitrust waivers to allow merchants and issuers to voluntarily negotiate rates

The GAO concluded:

If these measures were adopted here, merchants would benefit from lower interchange fees. Consumers would also benefit if merchants reduced prices for goods and services, but identifying such savings would be difficult.

Difficult, but not impossible. The merchant groups argue that if the interchange fees could be reduced, the prices of everything in the store could be reduced. But at the same time, they also argue that high interchange fees are squeezing them out of any available profit margins and forcing them out of business. And if the profits are non-existent, they won’t be reducing prices.

Interchange fees resulted in $48 billion dollars in revenue last year, through what I suspect are mostly automated processes.

Credit Cards: Rising Interchange Fees Have Increased Costs for Merchants, but Options for Reducing Fees Pose Challenges, U.S. Government Accountability Office, 19 November 2009

VN:F [1.8.1_1037]
Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)


Email Email Print Print
Share this article: Twitter | Tip'd | Facebook | Delicious | Reddit | Digg
About the Author

Smithee formerly lived primarily on credit cards and the good will of his friends. He is a newbie to personal finance but quickly learning from his past mistakes.

If you enjoyed this article, get the free RSS feed or get daily emails.

Join the free Consumerism Commentary newsletter. Enter your email address here to receive weekly emails with behind-the-scenes information, exclusive giveaways, and money tips.



Related Entries on Consumerism Commentary

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

1 John DeFlumeri Jr November 24, 2009 at 8:51 am

The stores really do pay a lot in merchant fees, and they look to avoid AMEX a lot of the time.

John DeFlumeri Jr

UN:F [1.8.1_1037]
Rating: 0.0/5 (0 votes cast)

Reply to this comment

Leave a Comment

Note: By submitting your comment you are agreeing to these terms and conditions. If you attempt to post spam, including promotional linking to a company website, your comment will be deleted.

Previous post:

Next post: