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The E-Sylum: Volume 27, Number 34, August 25, 2024, Article 20

GOODBYE CHECKS, HELLO INSTANT PAYMENTS

It was a long road from tally sticks to modern banking, but nothing is constant except change. As the use of checks for payment dwindles, instant payments are on the rise. Here's an excerpt from a recent Time magazine piece - see the complete article online. -Editor

  a check

One of the first checks ever recorded was written in the 11th century, in a marketplace in Basra, in present-day Iraq. There, a merchant issued a sakk: written instructions to his bank to make a payment from his account.

A thousand years later, this form of payment is finally disappearing. Target said it would stop accepting checks as of July 15; other retailers, including Whole Foods and Old Navy, have already stopped accepting them. It's just the latest sign that the form of payment is nearing obsolescence: The average American writes just one check a year, down from 3 in 2016, according to a Federal Reserve survey.

I absolutely think that we are moving to a world of ‘check zero,' says Scott Anchin, vice president at the Independent Community Bankers of America. As we see new payment methods come to the fore, we see new opportunities for consumers and businesses to move away from check usage.

Flawed as checks are, though, they haven't gone away entirely because many people still depend on them, especially to pay rent and utility bills. But experts say a new kind of payment may finally change that.

The newest type of payment— the first to be introduced in the U.S. since the ACH network in the 1970s—is called instant payments, in which money moves from your account to another account immediately. You may think you already use instant payments with services like Venmo, but you don't—behind the scenes, the money can take some time to move, and it's not coming directly from your bank account but from a Venmo account, for instance.

Here's how instant payments work: Different types of payments—wire transfers, checks, ACH—all happen over what are called rails. A rail is essentially the system that gets your money from one place to another. Think of a pile of cash in a briefcase. You could move that briefcase from one place to another in a car, or a bus, or a train, or an airplane; those transportation methods are like the rails that move your money. Instant payments are a new kind of payment rail, but there still needs to be a user interface to allow consumers to access them. Some payments on Zelle already happen on an instant payment rail, says Bridget Hall of ACI Worldwide.

One year ago, the Federal Reserve launched FedNow, an instant payment rail that allows for people to send money to each other if they're enrolled in participating institutions. Another payment rail, RTP, short for Real Time Payments, was launched in 2017 by The Clearing House, a private payment-system infrastructure owned by large commercial banks. But it has fewer participants than FedNow, which boasts about 900 participating banks and credit unions.

Instant payments are different from anything that exists now, including wire transfers, ACH payments, and debit cards. Wire transfers can take 24 hours to reach customer accounts, and they're not available 24/7; ACH payments are processed in batches and can only happen during banking hours; debit-card purchases don't settle in accounts immediately. But instant payments happen in real-time, at any hour of any day, and don't cost anything for the sender.

Real-time payments accounted for just 1.5% of total payments in 2023, which is about 3.5 billion transactions, according to ACI Worldwide, which sells software facilitating real-time payments. Experts expect that number to grow to 14 billion real-time transactions by 2028.

Instant payments are already extremely popular in other parts of the world. In India, real-time payments were launched in 2010 and now make up 84% of the share of all electronic payments—that's 129 billion transactions. Brazil had 37 billion real-time payment transactions in 2023, and Thailand had 20 billion, according to ACI Worldwide.

To read the complete article, see:
The Personal Check Is Disappearing. Here's What Comes Next (https://time.com/7005015/check-zero-instant-payments/)

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Wayne Homren, Editor

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