Electronic Payment Systems
Outline
 The Net Effect on Payment/E-Payment
 Impact on Developed Countries
 Starting point for Developing Nations
 New Opportunities
Conventional Payment
Mechanisms in United States
 Approx 80% of payments in Cash
Non-Cash
Payment
Instrument
Check
Trans. Trans.
Volume Value
Average
Value
71%
10%
$1,179
C/D Card
25%
0.1%
$59
C/D Transfer
by ACH
Wire Transfer
2.5%
2%
$2,000
0.1%
86%
$4.3m
1999  Source BIS
 International Trade involves Wire Transfers,
Letters of Credit etc.
Retail Payments  Net Evolution
 Cash  evolving (very slowly) to Internet based
systems such as Paypal
 Credit-Card based systems
 Ideal for Internet  already a global payment method 
tradition of card-not-present
 Combined with Secure Socket Layer, it is used for
almost all retail E-commerce  high fraud rate
 Retail Check  being eroded by Electronic Bill
Payment, electronic home banking
Trade Payments  Net Evolution
 Check Payments migrating to Electronic Transfers
 in the U.S. via the Automated Clearing House
(ACH) networks
 FSTC E-check and BIPS Projects
 ACH Transfers growing in importance
 European Initiatives: STEP1 (<50K)
 Global Initiatives : WATCH, CLS
 Internet access to these is coming
 Total trading Systems
 Bolero, Tradecard
Other Aspects of Electronic
Trading
 Electronic Trust building becoming more
common
 Legislative Changes in E-Commerce in Europe,
US and Asia enable this
 PKI Infrastructure being (slowly) built
 Verisign
 Identrus
 Wisekey
 In combination with E-paymentswill enable
complete transactions on-line
Conventional Payments in
Developing Countries
 Generally less developed banking industry
 Credit Cards not widely available
 More reliance on paper
 Foreign Exchange transactions more
problematic
 Being left out of new payment initiatives
Currently
1 +
9
32
10
New Opportunities
 On the Internet
no-one knows you
are a dog
 Internet banking
infrastructure is
cheap and easy to
build.. Opportunity to
leap-frog
 Open standards level
the paying field
 Must work with new
standards
Merchant Cards 101
Office of the State Controller
Types of Cards
Cards
Smart Cards
Credit Cards
Bank Cards
Settle via Associations
Debit Cards
Travel & Entertainment
(Proprietary Cards)
Settle directly
PIN
Online / Real-time
EBT Cards
Signature
Offline / Batch
 Credit Cards (Pay later)
 Bank Cards  e.g., Visa and MasterCard
 T&E Cards (Proprietary Cards)  e.g. Discover, Diners Club, AmX
 Debit Cards  (Pay now  Against checking acct)
 Smart Cards  (Prepay) Stored Value  Embedded Chip
 EBT Card  (Electronic Benefits Transfer) (Gov.-Issued debit card)
 Food Stamps (Funded directly by USDA)
 Cash Benefits (Not utilized in NC)
Merchant Card Players
3&6
Acquiring
Processor
Interchange Network
Visa USA
9 
 MasterCard Intl
Card Associations
8
Card Issuing Bank
11&12
10
4&5
Merchant
(Agency)
Citizen
(Taxpayer /
Cardholder)
13
States
Depository
Bank
Locals
Depository
Banks
Proprietary Card Cos.
 American Express
 Discover, etc.
Merchant Card Processor not involved with
Proprietary Card settlements.
Only involved with Authorizations
Authorization and Transmission  Day 1
Funds Settlement  Day 2 or later
Types of Capture
Card Capture
Card-Present
 Cards Accepted
 Credit Cards
 Debit with PIN
 Capture Method
 Point of Sale (POS)
 Card is swiped or keyed
 Lower risk
 Lower fees
Card Not-Present
 Cards Accepted
 Credit Cards
 Debit with Visa / MC Logo *
 Capture Methods
 Mail Or Tel Order (MOTO)
 Internet Order
 Higher risk
 Higher fees
* PIN-less debit cards without logo may be allowed
in future for governments - for Card Not-Present.
. Generally require a signature.
Credit Card Milestones
1920  Proprietary charge cards (Oil companies - courtesy cards)
1950  Travel and Entertainment (T&E) Card  Dinners Club Card
1966  Credit cards with revolving credit  BankAmericard being the first
1980s  Debit cards and ATM cards
1980s  NC Wildlife Resources Commission was first State agency to accept credit cards,
with fees paid from non-State funds
1990s  Universities began accepting cards, with fees paid from institutional trust funds
(non-State funds)
1995  OSC revised State Cash Management Plan to authorize credit card acceptance by
State agencies if approved by OSC.
1999  SB 222 enacted, giving OSC responsibility for EFT (including cards)
2000  OSC entered in a Master Services Agreement with STMS
2000  State Fair tickets could be purchased online using credit cards
2000  DMV drivers license could be renewed online using credit cards
2005  OSC initiated expansion of Electronic Commerce Program
2006 OSC re-selected STMS as vendor through RFP process
Electronic Funds Transfer 101
Office of the State Controller
Two Types of EFT
 EFT is a generic term
 Describing two
different methods of
transferring funds
electronically
EFT
Wire Transfer
ACH
 Both performed through Federal
Reserve Bank System
(Except for in-bank or on-us transactions)
 Common mistake to call an ACH payment a wire transfer
 Each are handled by different departments at a bank
Wire Transfer
Wire Transfer
Fed Wire
Between two banks
Book Transfer
Within same bank
Foreign Wire
Foreign bank
 Movement of funds is real time  effected immediately
 FRB open for fed wires up to 6:00 p.m.
 Book Transfers are memo posted up until midnight
 ZBA (Zero Balance Account) sweeps are book transfers
 Fed Wire Affects banks Reserve Accounts maintained at the FRB
 Sending banks account at the FRB gets debited
 Receiving banks account at the FRB gets credited
 Foreign exchange and Euro dollars through Clearing House for Inter-bank
Payments System (CHIPS)  54 New York Banks
Wire Transfer Utilization
 When appropriate to use
 Time sensitive - Funds need to be moved same day initiated
 Large dollar amounts
 Examples
 Debt Service Payments (preserve States credit rating)
 Funding ACH payments (e.g. payroll direct deposit)
 Funding investments (e.g., at custodian bank)
 Adjusting balances (between depository banks)
 Remitting ESC payments (to US Treasury)
 DOR accepts wire transfers from corporate taxpayers on an
exception basis only
Initiating Wire Transfers
 Banks provide corporate customers ability to initiate their
own wires via online banking access
 Templates are used
 Repetitive Transfers  Pre-established ABA# and acct.#
 Non-Repetitive - Open wire  to anywhere
 State Treasurer initiates all wire transfers for agencies
 Via Wachovia Connection and BOA Direct
 As requested by agencies via Core Banking $ystem
 Results in debit to agencys disbursing / STIF acct.
Agency Logs in
Disb. Acct.
at DST
Online Wire System
DSTs Bank
Payees Bank
ACH
ACH Network  A batch-process, store and forward for future settlement
 Two types of ACH (Automated Clearing House)
ACH
ACH Credits
Direct Deposits
 Always initiated by sender
 Senders account is debited
and receivers account is
credited
 Inbound & Outbound
ACH Debits
Electronic Drafts
Initiated by sender or receiver
If by sender  Sender authorizes a
third party to initiate transaction
If by receiver  Receiver initiates
transaction
Also referred to as Direct Payments
ACH Utilization
 When appropriate to use
 Large number of payments in a single file (batch)
 At least one day is available between initiation and settlement
 Any size dollar amounts
 Examples
 Outbound Payroll direct deposit (ACH credits)
 Outbound Vendor payments (ACH credits)
 Inbound Taxpayer payments (ACH credits or debits)
 ACH Transactions can have Addendum Records
 Remittance data attached
 Can be interfaced with A/R system
 DOR requires taxpayers to use TXP format
Governing Org.
ACH Players
3
2
Originating
Depository
Financial
Institution
(ODFI)
Trade Group
ACH Operator
(FRB)
Receiving
Depository
Financial
Institution
(RDFI)
1
Originator
(Company /
Employer)
Receiver
(Company /
Employee)
Authorization / Enrollment
Primary Differences
Wire Transfers
 Item Cost - $6.75
ACH
 Item Cost < 1 penny
 Same day funds
 Next day funds
 Transfer almost
 One day delay in
instantaneous
 Use for critical
payment (e.g. debt
service)
settlement
 Used for large batch
files (e.g., payroll)
Checks
Cost - $.75
Electronic Checks
 Loosely used term  Refers to two different methods
Electronic Checks
Online Paper Check
ACH Conversions
Online Paper Check
 Developed by Financial Services Technology Consortium (FSTC)  Not-forprofit group of CA banks
 Initiated using a PIN and digital signature
 Receiver prints out paper check for deposit
ACH Conversions (most common method referred to)
 Transactions converted to ACH debits (e.g., ARC, POP, WEB, TEL)
 Services can be provided by third party processors
 Account verification determined upfront. Guarantees available.
 Examples of services provided through third-party CyberSource (POP)
Telecheck:
CheckFree:
AmeriNet:
Paymentech:
Applies to consumer checks
only, not business checks.
Regulator Governance
 Regulation E, per Electronic Funds Transfer Act (EFTA)
Issued by Federal Reserve Bank
Covers ACH and debit cards (but not wires or credit cards)
Consumer protection oriented
Some protection afforded the consumer does not apply to corporate or
government customers
 NACHA Operating Rules
 National Automatic Clearing House Association
 Applies to ACH transactions only
 Applicable to both consumer and corporate (including government)
 Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)  Article 4A
 Applies to Wire Transfers Only
 Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Articles 3 and 4 and Reg CC
 Applies to negotiable instruments (checks)
 Reg CC issued by Federal Reserve - Applies to checks  not EFT
 Check 21 (Check image conversion) governed by Reg CC, not Reg E
ACH Terminology
 Typical ACH Standard Entry Class Codes
PPD  Prearranged Payments and Deposits (Consumer payments)
CCD - Cash Concentration or Disbursements (Corporate payments)
CCD+ - Corporate payments with 180 character addenda record
TXP  Addendum format for Tax Payments (Used by DOR)
 Check Conversion Standard Entry Class Codes
 POP  Point-of-Purchase / Face-to-face (e.g., Wal-Mart)
 ARC  Accounts Receivable Conversion  Non-face-to-face (e.g., Lockbox)
Check Conversions not eligible for use with corporate or government checks
 Other Standard Entry Class Codes (Debit entries)
 WEB  Internet-initiated entries against a consumer account
 TEL  Telephone-initiated entries against a consumer account
 RCK  Represented check (representment of a non-sufficient funds check)
Daylight Overdraft
 Federal Reserve charges bank interest per minute for
overdrafts in their Fed account
 Banks do not allow wire transfers to be made from
account if available balance is not sufficient
 Over-the-counter deposits not posted until night
 ACH credits are posted in mornings (6:30 and 8:30)
 Could pose problems when need to wire funds out
 Some banks will assign an allowable daylight
overdraft limit
 Based upon customers credit risk
 Based upon bank overdraft cap at the FRB
 States arrangements with banks are handled by DST
EFT Milestones
1972  SCOPE (Special Committee on Paperless Entries)
1974  NACHA (National Automated Clearing House Association)
1977  Retirement System began using Direct Deposit for retirees
1979  Central Payroll began using Direct Deposit for employees
1980s  University Payroll Centers began using Direct Deposit - employees
1984  GMTS (Governmental Moneys Transfer System) implemented by
DST for paying local units of government (Replaced by STEPS)
1988  DOT Payroll began using Direct Deposit for employees
1992  STEPS (State Treasurers Electronic Payments System) implemented
for local units (two-way street). (Ended 2003, except Retirement)
1994  DOR implemented EFT for corporate tax collections
1990s  LEAs and community colleges implemented direct deposit for
employees (costs being paid for by DST)
1999  SB 222 enacted, giving OSC responsibility for EFT
2002  Common Payment System implemented (DMV-IRP first)
2005  OSC initiated expansion of Electronic Commerce Program