-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- In article <Pine.SUN.3.91.951030121921.17834E-100000@tipper.oit.unc.edu>, Simon Spero <ses@tipper.oit.unc.edu> wrote:
One point worth noting is that the 5% cut used to be a typical fee for credit-card transactions. However, that cut only happened once per purchace, whereas digicash may incur this fee many more times.
I think there are two major differences between credit cards and digicash that affect the pricing structure. 1. Applicability We think of eventually using digicash for everything. You wouldn't just use it to pay Sears for a sweater, but Sears would use it to pay for the wool and for their taxes. A 5% hit may be ok for the final transaction, but it's impossible if you incur it every time money is exchanged. Credit cards are mostly consumer items and don't have this problem as much, and the states have invented resale licenses specifically to exempt you from paying sales tax at every step. I realize that digicash is being marketed as a consumer item, but I'd like to see it eventually become a standard banking instrument. I certianly trust it more than I trust EFT. 2. Float Cash schemes are unique in that while your money is in the ecash mint, the bank has the use of it. Don't underestimate the importance of this in a high-volume business; if digicash were popular, the banks would cut their margins to the point where this would probably be the major source of revenue. But it would be substantial. I think digicash out to be priced comparably to traveller's checks. That is what they are closest to. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQCVAwUBMJVRJOyjYMb1RsVfAQGMeQP/eg77ud1E1lyoWhERLkHXOawHaaUXcz/j mZoCD4ujmkiBmOmvqCyITG9UFOKSjzJ4aA8AC81AVPhCxVLIahMLZBFb2IvANz4r jLJraWyBNWpLk4TN/djwPcMdtMcQsAMTWB5IYeQDvp3IWS/rnIr01Zs0RiKYlE3q 7X5zuwDMujc= =BBfH -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Shields.