SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Visa Inc. today released the results of a new 2016 study conducted by
Moody's Analytics that analyzed the impact of electronic payments on
economic growth across 70 countries between 2011 and 2015. The
Visa-commissioned study found that increased use of electronic payment
products, including credit, debit and prepaid cards, added US$296B to
GDP, while raising household consumption of goods and services by an
average of 0.18 percent per year.
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In addition, Moody’s economists estimate that the equivalent to 2.6
million new jobs were created on average, annually, over the five-year
period as a result of increased use of electronic payments. The 70
countries in the study make up almost 95 percent of global GDP.
“Electronic payments are a major contributor to consumption, increased
production, economic growth and employment creation,” noted Mark Zandi,
Chief Economist, Moody’s Analytics. “Those countries which saw large
increases in card usage also saw larger contributions to overall growth
in their economies.”
Findings from the study were shared in the report, “The Impact of
Electronic Payments on Economic Growth,” which also indicated that
the electronification of payments benefited governments and contributed
to a more stable and open business environment. Additionally electronic
payments helped to minimize what is commonly referred to as the grey
economy -- economic activity that is often cash-based and goes
unreported. As a result, electronic payments provided a higher potential
tax revenue base for governments, while also bringing the added benefits
of lower cash handling costs, guaranteed payment to merchants and
greater financial inclusion for consumers.
”These findings reinforce the many positive benefits that electronic
payments bring to local economies all over the world,” said Charlie W.
Scharf, Chief Executive Officer, Visa Inc. “This research also suggests
that the right public policies can create an open, competitive payment
environment, and contribute to economic growth and job creation. At Visa
we are partnering globally with governments, financial institutions,
merchants and technology companies to develop innovative payment
products and services that will accelerate electronic acceptance, grow
commerce, and bring the benefits of card payments to more people
everywhere.”
Highlights of the global study include:
-
Growth Opportunities:
Card Penetration: Real
consumption grew at an average of 2.3 percent from 2011 to 2015, of
which 0.01 percent is attributable to increased card penetration. This
implies that card usage accounted for about 0.4 percent of growth in
consumption. Since consumption growth is, on average, faster in
emerging economies, those countries also have more to gain by
increasing card usage.
Card Usage: Countries with
the largest increases in card usage experienced the biggest
contributions in growth. For example, big increases in GDP were
recorded in Hungary (0.25%), the United Arab Emirates (0.23%), Chile
(0.23%), Ireland (0.2%), Poland (0.19%) and Australia (0.19%). In most
countries, card usage increased regardless of economic performance.
-
Contribution to Employment:
Increased card usage added the
equivalent to almost 2.6 million jobs on average, per year, across the
70 countries sampled between 2011 and 2015. Notably, the two countries
with the greatest average job increases were China (427,000 jobs
added) and India (336,000 jobs added), which both had large gains in
employment due to the combination of fast growing labor productivity
and increased card usage.
-
Emerging Markets and Developed Countries:
Both emerging
markets and developed countries experienced gains in consumption due
to higher card usage. Increased card usage added 0.2 percent to
consumption in emerging markets, compared with 0.14 percent in
developed countries between 2011 and 2015. The corresponding figures
for GDP were 0.11 percent for emerging economies and 0.08 percent for
developed countries, and suggests that all markets, regardless of
current card penetration rates, can benefit from increases in
consumption due to increases in card usage.
-
Potential Future Growth:
Across the 70 countries in the
study, Moody’s found that every 1 percent increase in usage of
electronic payments could produce, on average, an annual increase of
approximately $104 billion in the consumption of goods and services.
Assuming all future factors remain the same, this could result in an
annual average increase of 0.04 percent to GDP attributable to card
usage.
The study highlights that expanding electronic payments alone will not
necessarily increase a country’s prosperity -- it requires the support
of a well-developed financial system and healthy economy to have the
greatest impact. The report recommends at a macro-level, to encourage
the further electronification of payments, countries must promote
policies that minimize unneeded regulation, create a robust financial
infrastructure, and lead to greater consumption.
The study and additional materials can be found on www.visa.com/moodysanalytics
About Visa Inc.
Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) is a global payments technology company that connects
consumers, businesses, financial institutions, and governments in
more than 200 countries and territories to fast, secure and reliable
electronic payments. We operate one of the world's most advanced
processing networks — VisaNet — that is capable of handling more than
65,000 transaction messages a second, with fraud protection for
consumers and assured payment for merchants. Visa is not a bank and does
not issue cards, extend credit or set rates and fees for consumers.
Visa's innovations, however, enable its financial institution customers
to offer consumers more choices: pay now with debit, pay ahead of time
with prepaid or pay later with credit products. For more information,
visit usa.visa.com/about-visa,
visacorporate.tumblr.com
and @VisaNews.

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Source: Visa Inc.