This article examines differences in credit-card and debit-card usage between the United States and Japan. Although I do not doubt that social and psychological factors have some significance, I contend that four institutional factors also have useful explanatory power: the freedom of banks to enter the industry; the size of retailers; the level of telecommunications costs; and the size of the national economy. Generally, credit cards in Japan are used for a smaller share of transactions, with a higher average amount, and with less borrowing per transaction. The costs to merchants that take the cards and the rates of fraud also are noticeably higher in Japan than in the United States. The article argues that the difference in usage is attri...
This paper will take a look at electric money and demonstrate that it cannot entirely replace cash i...
We consider debit and credit card networks. Our contribution is to introduce the role of consumer cr...
There are two major differences between Japan and the United States in the way saving is calculated ...
This article is an exploration in the tradition of new institutional economics of the possibility th...
The following essay is excerpted from a paper prepared during fall 2000 during the author\u27s stay ...
The use of stored-value cards is growing rapidly in urban areas in Japan and gaining acceptance as a...
This paper relies on data from countries around the world to present a comprehensive analysis of pol...
This book tells the story of credit cards around the world: why people use them, the effects on the ...
We use data from several waves of the Survey of Consumer Finances to document credit and debit card ...
This article explores the specific question of setting a legal maximum for credit card interest rate...
Postprint.Analysis of data from the 2008 Survey of Chinese Consumer Finance and Investor Education i...
Americans writing about Japan seem to fall into two camps: those who think the Japanese act accordin...
Advertisements hang in the Japanese subway trains that ask for more savings in bank deposits. Twice ...
The following is a translation of Electronic Money and the Law: Legal Realities and Future Challenge...
This paper analyzes the experience of the U.S. postal savings system, and compares it to Japan's exp...
This paper will take a look at electric money and demonstrate that it cannot entirely replace cash i...
We consider debit and credit card networks. Our contribution is to introduce the role of consumer cr...
There are two major differences between Japan and the United States in the way saving is calculated ...
This article is an exploration in the tradition of new institutional economics of the possibility th...
The following essay is excerpted from a paper prepared during fall 2000 during the author\u27s stay ...
The use of stored-value cards is growing rapidly in urban areas in Japan and gaining acceptance as a...
This paper relies on data from countries around the world to present a comprehensive analysis of pol...
This book tells the story of credit cards around the world: why people use them, the effects on the ...
We use data from several waves of the Survey of Consumer Finances to document credit and debit card ...
This article explores the specific question of setting a legal maximum for credit card interest rate...
Postprint.Analysis of data from the 2008 Survey of Chinese Consumer Finance and Investor Education i...
Americans writing about Japan seem to fall into two camps: those who think the Japanese act accordin...
Advertisements hang in the Japanese subway trains that ask for more savings in bank deposits. Twice ...
The following is a translation of Electronic Money and the Law: Legal Realities and Future Challenge...
This paper analyzes the experience of the U.S. postal savings system, and compares it to Japan's exp...
This paper will take a look at electric money and demonstrate that it cannot entirely replace cash i...
We consider debit and credit card networks. Our contribution is to introduce the role of consumer cr...
There are two major differences between Japan and the United States in the way saving is calculated ...