Abstract
Overview
Introduction
The way in which consumers make payments in Europe differs significantly
between countries, however, in each, general-purpose payment cards have grown
in importance over time. Use this resource to understand consumer payment
trends and identify future growth opportunities.
Scope
- Provides data and analysis on the key trends in consumer payments in
Europe for 2002-06
- Draws upon output of Datamonitor' s Consumer Payments model to provide the
value of payments made by pay now, deferred debit/charge and credit cards
- Product splits by cheque, direct debit, credit transfer are also provided,
as is an estimate for the value of cash payments
- Provides data for the value of payments made only by consumers and as
such, does not include commercial, government or cash acquisition transactions
Report Highlights
In 2006 the combined value of consumer non-cash payments was €3,480bn,
accounting for 66.1% of total consumer expenditure.
Of this, electronic payments for utility bills and other recurring
transactions such as loan and mortgage repayments clearly dominate; the
estimated value of direct debits and credit transfers was €1,892bn in 2006,
35.9% of total consumer payments.
In addition to accounting for an important share of total consumer
expenditure, general-purpose plastic cards have been the fastest growing area
of consumer payments. Over the period 2002-06, the value of general-purpose
card consumer expenditure grew at a compound annual rate of 13.8%.
Reasons to Purchase
- Access data from Datamonitor' s Consumer Payments model to understand how
consumers make payments, and which payment methods are used by market
- Understand which payment tools currently dominate the space, and the size
of the potential market opportunity for payment cards
- Discover the key trends, developments, and differences in way consumers
make payments in Western and Central and Eastern Europe