Friday, January 31, 2014

EU Court Adviser Puts MasterCard in Its Place

MasterCard is doing everything in its power to fight EU regulator’s 2007 decision to limit the fees European retailers pay for processing credit and debit card transactions. Fortunately, it seems like nobody believes MasterCard’s claim that capping interchange fees is not beneficial to merchants and consumers. Earlier this week an adviser to European Commission said MasterCard’s appeal should be completely dismissed.
 
European retailers stood up against credit card giants: Visa and MasterCard and have been fighting for a fair and competitive payments system. However, MasterCard doesn’t want to let go of huge interchange fee profits. Limiting swipe fees to 0.2 percent for debit and 0.3 percent for credit translates to €6 billion a year in savings for retailers and consumers in Europe.
 
Bloomberg quoted the CEO of Europe’s biggest home improvement retailers, Kingfisher Plc:
“Stimulating competition in the payment services market and ensuring fair interchange fees will create capital to enable a range of investments to be made.”
In U.S. transaction fee rates are even more overblown. They are 7 or 8 times higher! This reduces retailers profits significantly and forces them to either raise prices, which hurts consumers and limits their spending or prevents merchants from hiring new employees.
 
The EU court should make a decision within next 6 months and it usually agrees with the advisers’ opinions. In this case, the advice is spot-on.

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