Search Results

SORT BY: PREVIOUS / NEXT
Keywords:checking accounts OR Checking accounts 

Report
The 2017 Diary of Consumer Payment Choice

This paper describes key results from the 2017 Diary of Consumer Payment Choice (DCPC), the fourth in a series of diary surveys that measure payment behavior through the daily recording of U.S. consumers' spending. The DCPC is the only diary survey of U.S. consumer payments available free to the public. In October 2017, consumers paid mostly with cash (30.3 percent of payments), debit cards (26.2 percent), and credit cards (21.0 percent). These instruments accounted for three-quarters of the number of payments, but only about 40 percent of the total value of payments, because they tend to be ...
Consumer Payments Research Data Reports , Paper 2018-5

Journal Article
Get Checking Launches in Houston

Access to mainstream financial services is on the horizon for unbanked and underbanked consumers in Houston through Get Checking(TM), a national initiative sponsored by eFunds Corp. and the University of Wisconsin Extension.
e-Perspectives , Volume 6 , Issue 4

Journal Article
Interest checking

FRBSF Economic Letter

Journal Article
Perspective: While more people are paying electronically, many of us still cling to checks.

Regional Review , Volume 11 , Issue Q 4 , Pages 2 - 4

Journal Article
Changes in the use of transaction accounts and cash from 1984 to 1986

Federal Reserve Bulletin , Issue Mar , Pages 179-196

Journal Article
Checking accounts: what do banks offer and what do consumers value?

Recent evidence shows that the supply of deposits to checking accounts is not elastic with respect to the interest rates paid. That suggests that various features attached to checking accounts may be important in determining the supply of deposits and banks' and revenues from the fees. This study uses a national survey of checking accounts offered by financial institutions in 25 major metropolitan areas in the United States to analyze the effects of restrictions and fees imposed on checking account holders on the supply of deposits and on the banks' check fee revenues. The author places ...
New England Economic Review , Issue Mar , Pages 3-14

Working Paper
Checking accounts and bank monitoring.

Superseded by the paper "Transactions accounts and loan monitoring" (Working Paper 05-14) ; Do checking accounts help banks monitor borrowers? If they do, the rationale both for allowing regulated providers of liquidity to also make risky loans to commercial borrowers and for the government's providing deposit insurance becomes clearer. Using a unique set of data that includes monthly and annual information on small-business borrowers at an anonymous Canadian bank, we provide evidence that a bank has exclusive access to a continuous stream of borrower data that helps it to monitor the ...
Working Papers , Paper 01-3

Report
2018 Survey of Consumer Payment Choice

In 2018, U.S. consumers made 72 payments per month on average, not a significant change from 2017.As in 2017, the most frequently used payment instruments were debit cards (34 percent of alltransactions), cash (24 percent), and credit cards (23 percent). Over the 11 years of the survey, debit,cash, and credit have consistently been the most popular ways to pay. For the first time in 2018, debitcards replaced cash as the payment instrument used most frequently for in-person purchases.Some key findings about medium-term trends from 2015 to 2018 include the following:• The share of consumers ...
Consumer Payments Research Data Reports , Paper 2019-2

Journal Article
How effective is lifeline banking in assisting the 'unbanked'?

Many consumers who lack checking accounts are paying relatively high costs to access the nation's payments system. Legislation aimed at opening the system to these unbanked individuals has centered on requiring commercial banks to offer low-cost "lifeline" accounts. But will cost savings alone motivate these consumers to access the payments system through banks?
Current Issues in Economics and Finance , Volume 4 , Issue Jun

Report
The 2015 Survey of Consumer Payment Choice: summary results

The 2015 Survey of Consumer Payment Choice (SCPC) was implemented using a new longitudinal panel, the Understanding America Study (UAS), and results are not yet comparable to the 2008?2014 SCPC. In 2015, U.S. consumers made 68.9 payments per month. Debit cards remained the most popular payment instrument among U.S. consumers in 2015, accounting for 32.5 percent of their monthly payments, followed by cash (27.1 percent) and credit or charge cards (21.3 percent). For nonbills, consumers used cash and debit equally?about one-third of the time for each. For bills, consumers used payment cards for ...
Research Data Report , Paper 17-3

FILTER BY year

FILTER BY Content Type

Journal Article 18 items

Report 8 items

Working Paper 3 items

Briefing 1 items

FILTER BY Author

FILTER BY Jel Classification

E42 10 items

D12 9 items

D14 8 items

G21 1 items

G23 1 items

FILTER BY Keywords

PREVIOUS / NEXT