Plans to develop substitutes for paper cheques may be underway, but some
consumers have yet to buy into technology-based propositions, say experts.
“Technology has presented the opportunity to effectively eliminate cheques,
but many customers like the option of being able to write a cheque, and struggle
to move away from it,” said Stephen Ley, technology assurance and advisory
director at financial services giant
Deloitte.
Mobile payments are seen as a key area of development, added Ley. But there
are challenges, which include the cost of setting up the infrastructure and
uncertainty over whether there is enough demand.
UK mobile users rank among the most reluctant to use their device to bank
online, with 79 per cent of users saying they do not trust phones to provide a
secure transaction, according to recent research from
Unisys.
“For higher value payments, people will recognise the benefits of using
systems such as Chaps and Faster Payments the same-day clearing facility
covering transactions made via internet and phone payments as it is quicker
and banks ensure that it is secure to make payments that way. The real challenge
of phasing out cheques is related to their use for low-value payments,” said
Ley.
Options include independent prepaid cards, whereby customers can simply load
a card with money with no need for registration, which could potentially offer a
payment alternative for older and those without bank accounts.
Pre-loaded, chip-equipped cards that can be topped up via connections to
debit or credit accounts, such as
Mastercard’s Mondex
card and some Visa
products, are another option.
Banks have been looking at such alternatives for a long time, mainly due to
the fact that cheque processing is costly for both banks and consumers and be
cause it has historically been a fraud-prone area.
But the fragmentation of existing infrastructure may hamper the effective
implementation of alternatives to cheques and add to customer confusion. In its
latest consultation, government body
The Payments
Council has stressed “the need for harmonisation of standards so that
merchants can invest in new payment systems with confidence that most consumers
will have compatible devices”.
The consultation also revealed that consumer groups want to ensure that these
developments do not create financial exclusion, and that consumers’ interests
are protected.
Convergence may be the answer, said Dave Birch, director at
Consult Hyperion.
Efficient alternatives will be potentially achieved via the union of prepaid
technology, which will soon grow massively in the UK, mobiles, which will be a
key device in receiving and sending payments and biometrics as a tool to tackle
security threats,” he said.
“Card-not-present fraud keeps going up, so there needs to be a reliable
mechanism in place to ensure security. That is likely to be voice due to the
synergy between voice biometrics and mobiles,” said Birch.
“If you look at those three technologies coming together in the next 10
years, the industry has a sensible timescale to provide suitable alternatives.”
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