speeches · April 9, 2000
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
9:00 a.m. (PDT), noon EDT
April 10,2000
Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
National Automated Clearinghouse Association
Annual Meeting
Los Angeles, California
April 10,2000
It is a pleasure to be with you this morning to discuss the changes that are taking
place in our retail payments system. Many of the individuals and institutions involved in
these changes will be addressing this conference over the next three days. It seems clear
that, as in many sectors of the economy, innovations in technology, changes in business
practices, and effective competition are reinforcing one another and causing the pace of
experimentation with new products and services to accelerate.
Nonetheless, the payment systems of the United States present a paradox. Our
systems and banking arrangements for handling large-value dollar payments are all
electronic and have been for many years. Banking records, including those for loans and
deposits, have been computerized since the 1960s. Securities markets also now rely on
highly automated records and systems, born out of necessity following the paperwork
crisis of the 1970s. Yet in transactions initiated by consumers, paper—currency and
checks—remains the payment system of choice.
There were sweeping predictions in the late 1960s and early 1970s that electronic
payments would quickly replace paper in the nation's commerce. In the wholesale
financial markets, these predictions came true, as concerns about risk and efficiency led
to the widespread adoption of electronic technologies in back offices of financial firms
and in payment and settlement systems. Yet in the retail payments system, we have
tended to underestimate the size of the hurdles confronting a shift away from paper.
Indeed, the average consumer is exceptionally conservative and traditional when
it comes to money, which has a profoundly important role in day-to-day living. To the
vast majority of people, it represents the stored value of one's previous efforts. To many,
it is the embodiment of their life's work. Tampering with money has always had
profoundly political implications. Much of American politics of the late nineteenth
century, for example, was about the gold standard and the free silver movement. William
Jennings Bryan's famous "Cross of Gold" speech during the presidential campaign of
1896 reflected the deep-seated views of money's role in society and, even today, one can
hear echoes of that debate in the public discourse about money.
Our history vividly affirms that the average person is far more sensitive to what
form our money—our store of value and medium of exchange—takes than we payments
system specialists have readily understood. It took many generations for people to feel
comfortable accepting paper in lieu of gold or silver. It is taking almost as long to
convince them that holding money and making payments in ephemeral electronic form is
as secure as using paper.
There is, of course, more to the tenacity of paper than a deep psychological
connection between money and tangible wealth. Paper instruments also are perceived to
have a greater degree of privacy than electronic payments, although there have been
experiments with electronic money and other instruments that would provide relatively
high levels of privacy. But confidence in such arrangements may take quite awhile to
emerge. Currency, and to a large degree checks, are currently perceived to offer
significant advantages in privacy over electronic payment systems that entail centrally
maintained databases with elaborate records of individual transactions.
Perhaps an even more important dimension influencing our behavior regarding
money and payments is convenience. Currency and checks do not require the users to
travel to special locations, dial the number of a special machine, or maintain special
equipment to originate payments. This is not to deny that automation has played an
important role in reducing risks and increasing efficiency in handling currency and
checks. Rather, the issue is that traditional paper instruments allow the users themselves,
within a structured format, to have significant control over when, where, and how to
make payments.
Turning to the suppliers of payment instruments and services, we see that many
are straddling two different worlds. The world of paper is well known and a major part
of the business of traditional financial institutions. The world of electronic commerce is
a new and growing part of business that is changing daily and operating on a different
time scale.
The phrase "Internet time" has now been added to our vocabulary. Behind this
phrase is a serious observation that advances in information technology allow new ideas
to be transformed into products and services much more rapidly than a few years ago,
thus greatly speeding up product cycles. At the same time, new information technologies
have broken down barriers between firms and stimulated very creative and competitive
processes across the economy.
Some traditional financial institutions have tended to view this process with
concern. As many firms have driven to find new ways to supply financial and other
kinds of information, along with transactions and accounting services, some have
expressed concern that their traditional payment franchise is being eroded. This concern
is another manifestation of the insecurity brought on by innovation and change.
Many firms, including financial firms, have now opened channels of data
communication with existing and potential customers and business partners through the
Internet. In this world, particularly in retail commerce, payments by paper have been the
exception, not the rule. Despite ongoing discussions about privacy and security in
electronic commerce, credit cards have rapidly become the payment instrument of choice
for consumers. Interestingly, there have been experiments with new payment systems
analogous to private currency. To date, these products have not been widely successful,
despite the fact that some have offered significant degrees of privacy and security.
Instead, familiarity with and confidence in the credit card built up over more than half a
century of use seem for now to have shaped behavior. Some suppliers have sought to
deepen confidence by voluntarily expanding consumer protections. In a twist of history,
even gold coins can now be purchased on line with a credit card.
Experiments are also taking place to facilitate the use of debit cards in on-line
transactions. The use of such instruments would clearly expand electronic payment
capabilities over the Internet to those with bank accounts who do not hold credit cards.
Experiments with technologies such as electronic money that do not even require bank
accounts may yet find a role to play. New arrangements are also being tried that would
mimic the flexibility of the check in making payments in diverse on-line transactions
ranging from ad hoc person-to-person payments to routine business-to-business
purchases.
Regarding the older electronic payment systems such as the automated
clearinghouse (ACH), both suppliers of payment services and the end users are
continuing to look for new ways to build on the interbank processing efficiencies that
these systems offer. One of the great ironies is that studies in the 1960s and '70s led to
recommendations that it would be more economical for society to build whole new
electronic payment systems such as the ACH than to adopt check-truncation
technologies. Although the ACH has been extremely effective for automating some
types of transactions, it has not been as widely used as originally anticipated. One of the
problems has apparently been the relative lack of flexible and low-cost interfaces with
consumers and with business systems similar to those that have been built up around the
check.
Now, however, a range of experiments and businesses are building on the ACH,
and potentially on other electronic payment networks. In a revival of the idea of check
truncation, projects have gone forward to truncate checks at the point of sale, as well as at
lockbox locations, and to substitute ACH payments. These projects seek to combine the
benefits to users of the check with the processing efficiencies of electronic payment
systems.
One more set of very interesting experiments involves electronic bill presentment
and bill payment. There are competing models of the way technology can be used to
eliminate paper and save time in both the presentment and payment of consumer bills.
Leading models draw heavily on the ACH as the electronic payment mechanism, creating
a much more flexible interface for users with the ACH than has existed in the past.
As we look forward, the Federal Reserve recognizes that whatever innovations
develop, the check will likely be with us for many years. Americans still write about
sixty eight billion checks a year, and the numbers are expected to grow. At the Federal
Reserve, we continue to modernize our check-processing systems. We are testing new
systems for truncating and electronically presenting checks, which include capturing and
storing the image of checks and enabling institutions to make payment decisions in real
time by accessing these images through the Internet. At the same time, we are working to
strengthen the payments system by enhancing the long-term efficiency of our check and
automated clearinghouse services.
The Federal Reserve also clearly recognizes the need to foster innovation in the
private sector and to help remove barriers to the development and adoption of new
payment services for electronic and traditional commerce. As I have often said, to
continue to be effective, government's regulatory role must increasingly be focused on
assuring that adequate risk management systems are in place in the private sector. As
financial systems have become more complex, detailed rules and standards have become
both more burdensome and less effective. If we wish to foster financial innovation, we
must first be careful not to impose rules that inhibit it, and we must be especially
watchful that we not unduly impede our increasingly broad electronic payments system.
Thus, the private sector needs to play the pivotal role in determining what
payment services consumers and businesses actually demand and in supplying those
services. In a period of change and uncertainty there may be a temptation, and a desire
by some market participants, to have the government step in and resolve the uncertainty,
whether through standards, regulation, or other policies, hi the case of electronic
payment innovations, only consumers and merchants will ultimately determine what new
products are successful in the marketplace. Government action can retard progress, but
almost certainly cannot ensure it.
One important role government can play, however, is to help identify and, where
appropriate, help remove barriers to innovation. As part of our continuing efforts, the
Federal Reserve established last summer the Payments System Development Committee.
The Committee, led by the Board's Vice Chairman Roger Ferguson and President Cathy
Minehan of the Boston Federal Reserve Bank, will advise us on public policy issues
relating to the strategic development of the retail payments system. An important
objective of the Committee is to work with the private sector to identify specific barriers
to improving the retail payments system, along with steps that the Federal Reserve could
take to address these barriers.
As you begin this three-day conference focusing on new developments in the
payments system, I hope that you will approach your discussions with a sense of both
history and of new opportunities. Centuries of experience have been distilled into our
traditional forms of paper payments, and change has not always come quickly. Yet new
technologies and new forms of business are engines for change. More fundamentally, the
enthusiasm of our society for experiment and innovation reflects a strong sense of
confidence about the future that began in the very early days of our country. I am
confident that this past will be prologue.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (2000, April 9). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20000410_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20000410_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {2000},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20000410_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}