Regulating Iranian Card payments System as a two sided market
Authors
Abstract:
This paper examines the necessity of regulating the Iranian card payments system (SHAPARAK) based on the theory of two-sided markets. The expansion of the payment card system in recent years has arisen some questions regarding the role of all kinds of costs and expenses such as interchange fees, cardholder fees, merchant fees, and network externality in balancing the market. Since there is only an interchange fee in Iran, regulation of the card payments system is necessary to assess the variables affecting this system. The data used in this study consist of 1218 observations of 29 banks from March 2016 to August 2019. The econometric method for this purpose is the fixed effects panel data model. The results indicate that the interchange fee has an essential role in balancing the Iranian card payment system market. Also, network externality makes the opportunity for balancing the market by decreasing the interchange fee and finally reducing transaction costs for acquirer banks. This policy can lower the interest rate of the bank loans because, in the Iranian card payment system, cardholders and merchants do not pay fees for transactions. So, banks try to attract clients for issuing cards and receive interchange fees as revenue to compensate for the payment network costs by the interest rate of loans. Overall, the results of the estimated model show that improving the card payments system in Iran should be regulated by related organizations.
similar resources
A Two-Sided Discrete-Concave Market with Bounded Side Payments: An Approach by Discrete Convex Analysis
The marriage model due to Gale and Shapley and the assignment model due to Shapley and Shubik are standard in the theory of two-sided matching markets. We give a common generalization of these models by utilizing discrete concave functions and considering bounded side payments. We show the existence of a pairwise stable outcome in our model. Our present model is a further natural extension of t...
full textDynamic Matching in a Two-Sided Market
Motivated by the rise of the sharing economy, we consider an intermediary firm’s problem of dynamically matching demand and supply of heterogeneous types over a discrete-time horizon. More specifically, there are two finite disjoint sets of demand and supply types. Associated with each possible matching of a demand type and a supply type is a reward. In each period, demand and supply of various...
full textA Guide to the Card Payments System Reforms
When most cardholders swipe a card at a retailer to purchase goods and services, they are probably unaware of what happens behind the scenes between the time the card is swiped and when the merchant is finally paid. There is, however, a detailed set of arrangements between financial institutions that ensure that the merchant is paid and the cardholder’s account debited. Historically, these arra...
full textPiracy in a two - sided software market
This paper studies the impact of software piracy in a two-sidedmarket setting. Software platforms attract developers and users to maximize their profits. The equilibrium price structure is affected by piracy: license fees to developers are higher with more software protection but the impact on user prices is ambiguous. A conflict between platforms and software developers over software protectio...
full textA Two-Sided Discrete-Concave Market with Possibly Bounded Side Payments: An Approach by Discrete Convex Analysis
The marriage model due to Gale and Shapley and the assignment model due to Shapley and Shubik are standard in the theory of two-sided matching markets. We give a common generalization of these models by utilizing discrete concave functions and considering possibly bounded side payments. We show the existence of a pairwise stable outcome in our model. Our present model is a further natural exten...
full textMarket Anomalies on Two-Sided Auction Platforms
A market anomaly (or market inefficiency) is a price distortion typically on a financial market that seems to contradict the efficient-market hypothesis. Such anomalies could be calendar, technical or fundamental related and have been shown empirically in a number of settings for financial markets. This paper extends this stream of research to two-sided auction platforms in Electronic Commerce ...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 15 issue 2
pages 199- 220
publication date 2020-04
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023