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Card schemes are payment networks linked to payment cards, such as debit or credit cards, of which a bank or any other eligible financial institution can become a member. By becoming a member of gets the possibility to issue cards or acquire merchants operating on the network of that card scheme.[1][2] UnionPay, Visa and MasterCard are three of the largest global brands, known as card schemes, or card brands. Billions of transactions[3] go through their cards on a yearly basis.
Types
editThe card schemes come in two main varieties - a three-party scheme (or closed scheme) or a four-party scheme (or open scheme).
Three-party scheme
editA three-party scheme consists of three main parties, as described in the adjacent diagram.
In this model, the issuer (having the relationship with the cardholder) and the acquirer (having the relationship with the merchant) are the same entity. This means that there is no need for any charges between the issuer and the acquirer. Since it is a franchise setup, there is only one franchisee in each market, which is the incentive in this model. There is no competition within the brand; rather, you compete with other brands.
Examples of this setup are Diners Club, Discover Card, and American Express, although in recent times these schemes have also partnered with other issuers and acquirers in order to boost their circulation and acceptance, and Diners Club now operates as a four-party scheme in many regions.[4]
Four-party scheme
editIn a four-party scheme (also referred to as Four Corners Model, the issuer and acquirer are different entities, and this type of scheme is open for other institutions to join and issue their own cards. This is the type of card scheme used by brands such as Visa, Mastercard, Verve Card, UnionPay and RuPay. There are no limitations as to who may join the scheme, as long as the requirements of the scheme are met.
Processes
editThe card scheme uses the respective guidelines[5][6] to process the card exchange data from the acquiring to the issuing bank, and vice versa, until the payment[7] is fully completed (or denied). Credit and debit cards work with a four-party scheme, completing an open-circle framework that permits consistent flow of transactions; thus, allowing the banks to handle the whole process.
Card schemes aim to make the transaction convenient and automated for all parties involved in the loop, with the core belief that clients end up spending more than intended when the payment process is simple.
Key parties
editCardholder
editA cardholder is a consumer, who owns the debit or credit card, issued by their bank, or other financial institution. They aren't legally obliged to use a single card scheme and may own various types of cards, issued by numerous institutions.
Card issuer
editThe card issuer, as the name implies, issues credit, debit, and prepaid cards from any of the available card schemes to all clients who went through a screening process and are, therefore, qualified to own a bank account. Card issuers can be not only banks but any other certified financial institution.
Acquiring bank
editThe acquiring bank (also known as obtaining bank), is the organization that provides administration consent to the merchant and validates their transaction process.
Merchant
editAny business, or individual, that receives payment based on the product or service, which they offer.
Payment processor
editThe payment processing company imparts and transfers data for a client's credit or debit card to both the issuing and acquiring bank. The processor likewise checks for security issues, ensuring that the client's card information is right, and all data is entered correctly. Also, the same party deals with incorrect or accidental charges.
Payment gateway
editA payment gateway is a key party, responsible for online transactions, passing card data from consumer to merchant, and to a relevant bank through the card scheme. The process usually takes place at POS terminals in retail locations, or by means of online payment services for websites. A payment gateway imparts whether the charge has been processed by the cardholder's bank and moves it further for settlement.
Fees
editCard scheme fees are the expenses that are paid by acquiring banks, which, on the other hand, charge merchants through transaction fees. Card scheme fees are not openly uncovered, and no outside parties knows the genuine figure.
Those fees might incorporate quite a few charges, some of which are - fixed or transaction fees, unrelated to the individual payment. Factors, such as the card type, payment method, and geographic area might influence the variable fees.
Interchange fees
editInterchange fees[8] (or trade fees) are transaction charges that the acquiring bank pays when a payment is being processed via debit or credit card. The expenses are paid to the issuing bank and cover costs, such as processing fees, bad debt, and charges due to risk and potential fraudulent activities.
References
edit- ^ Rupp, Martin (April 22, 2021). "Cardholder, Merchant, Issuer & Acquirer - The Four Corners Model for Payment Security and Key Management". Cryptomathic.
- ^ Études et activités bancaires et financières (January 2013). "An interbank payment card system for the benefit of all" (PDF). Fédération Bancaire Française. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-09-25. Retrieved 2021-05-17.
- ^ de Best, Raynor (July 2021). "Number of purchase transactions on global general purpose card brands". Statista.
- ^ Laurer, Christoph (2022-03-10). "How Online Card-Based Payments Function". trimplement blog. Retrieved 2023-05-24.
- ^ Summary of changes 2020 (December 2020). "Mastercard card scheme - Rules and guidelines" (PDF). Mastercard. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-08-23. Retrieved 2021-08-23.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Visa core rules 2021 (April 2021). "Visa card scheme - Product and service rules" (PDF). Visa.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "The payment industry's biggest trends in 2021". Insider Intelligence. July 2021.
- ^ "Mastercard and Visa - revisions to interchange rates between the UK and the EEA". Bambora. May 2021.