Payment card networks, such as Visa, require merchants' banks to pay substantial "interchange" fees to cardholders' banks on a per transaction basis. This paper shows that anetwork's profit-maximizing fee induces an inefficient price structure, oversubsidizing card usage and overtaxing merchants. We show that this distortion is systematic and arisesfrom the fact that consumers make two distinct decisions (membership and usage), whereas merchants make only one (membership). In general, we contribute to the theory of two-sided markets by introducing a model that distinguishes between extensive and intensive margins, thereby explaining why two-part tariffs are useful pricing tools for platforms. (JEL D42, D85, G21, L12).
Bedre Defolie, O., Calvano, E. (2013). Pricing payment cards. AMERICAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL: MICROECONOMICS, 5(3), 206-231 [10.1257/mic.5.3.206].
Pricing payment cards
CALVANO, EMILIO
2013-01-01
Abstract
Payment card networks, such as Visa, require merchants' banks to pay substantial "interchange" fees to cardholders' banks on a per transaction basis. This paper shows that anetwork's profit-maximizing fee induces an inefficient price structure, oversubsidizing card usage and overtaxing merchants. We show that this distortion is systematic and arisesfrom the fact that consumers make two distinct decisions (membership and usage), whereas merchants make only one (membership). In general, we contribute to the theory of two-sided markets by introducing a model that distinguishes between extensive and intensive margins, thereby explaining why two-part tariffs are useful pricing tools for platforms. (JEL D42, D85, G21, L12).File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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