Journal of Financial Market Infrastructures

Risk.net

Retail payment technology and money demand: evidence from China

Chun-Yu Ho, Rongzi Shan and Li Xu

  • We examine how retail payment technology affects money demand in China from 1999Q1 to 2020Q4.
  • Payment card penetration in retail transactions is measured using the ratio of payments through point-of-sale (POS) machines to retail sales.
  • Payment card penetration increases from 0.02 to 3.16 over the sample period and that higher payment card penetration reduces money demand.
  • We show that the welfare cost of inflation would have more than doubled in the year 2020 had payment card penetration remained at its 1999 level.

This paper examines the impact of retail payment technology on money demand. Our study provides three main findings. First, using a unique quarterly data set from China spanning the period 1999 Q1 to 2020 Q4, we analyze the ratio of payment through point-of-sale machines to retail sales to measure payment card penetration in retail transactions and show that payment card penetration increased from 0.02 to 3.16 over the sample period. Second, by estimating a semi-logarithmic money demand function, we show that higher payment card penetration reduces money demand, with an elasticity estimated at -0.16. Third, we assess the welfare cost of inflation by employing a consumer surplus approach, showing that this cost would have more than doubled in the year 2020 had payment card penetration remained at its 1999 level. Finally, our results are shown to be robust across alternative money demand functions.

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