An Open Letter to Members of Congress: Stop the Fed’s Real-Time Payment Takeover
Dear Members of Congress,
On behalf of the undersigned organizations, we write to urge you to oppose the Federal Reserve’s proposal to operate a real-time payments system (RTP) that would operate in direct competition with today’s existing private sector solution and potentially cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. Under the Fed’s mandate as defined in the Monetary Control Act, it should only intervene if, “the service is one that other providers alone cannot be expected to provide with reasonable effectiveness, scope, and equity.” Today, the market is providing a diverse and rapidly-evolving set of RTP services for both consumers and banks. The Clearing House’s (TCH) system currently serves roughly 50 percent of all checking account volume in the U.S., a figure expected to reach two-thirds by the end of 2019, and near ubiquity by 2020. By the end of 2019, approximately 90 percent of financial institutions will be able to connect to TCH’s RTP services. From PayPal’s latest real-time offering, to Mastercard Send, Visa Direct, and Zelle, there are no shortages of existing faster payment options in the market.
The Fed’s potential entry into RTP—as both a regulator and a competitor—will only serve to distort the existing market, keep smaller financial institutions on the sidelines of a dynamic playing field, and add a duplicative layer of payment rails that will do nothing to drive innovation. As TCH has already spent millions of dollars building RTP rails in the U.S., and core processors are starting to connect smaller financial institutions, a Fed RTP effort would add a duplicative set of rails. Instead of engaging in mission creep that will likely raise fresh questions of the institution’s transparency -- not to mention privacy and data security concerns over its untested project -- we believe the appropriate role for the Fed is to support private sector innovation in this field and manage liquidity.
Advocates of the Fed’s proposal claim its intrusion into the market will create another participant and act as a counterweight to TCH and other competitors. However, policy experience from the Fed’s influence in the ACH market indicate otherwise, since the Fed offers steep discounts based on volume. By contrast, TCH as a RTP facilitator, treats all customers the same and does not offer volume discounts. This was a crucial factor in the Department of Justice’s approval of TCH’s rules and operations. If the Fed enters the market, there is a risk it will try to unfairly undercut its competitors on price while regulating both its competitors and customers.
Innovation doesn’t wait in our economy. If the Fed were to act now, it would likely take three to four years to establish its duplicative RTP system. Based on reported past implementation costs for TCH as well as estimated costs from banks for connecting to such a network, the RTP project could amount to hundreds of millions of dollars, likely with little additional marginal effect on payment systems that true private-sector entities would otherwise achieve on their own during that time. Furthermore, these misprioritized expenditures would ultimately be a loss to taxpayers – an especially important consideration as the Fed returns to more normalized monetary policy and, in turn smaller overall payments to the Treasury. For all these reasons, we urge policymakers to reject the Fed’s attempt to act as a competitor and a regulator in today’s vibrant real-time payments market.
Sincerely,
National Taxpayers Union
Alabama Policy Institute
Alaska Policy Forum
American Commitment
American Consumer Institute
Americans for Tax Reform
Bluegrass Institute for Public Policy Solutions
California Policy Center
Center for Individual Freedom
Center for Freedom and Prosperity
Civitas Institute
Council for Citizens Against Government Waste
FreedomWorks
Georgia Public Policy Foundation
Granite Institute (NH)
Heritage Action
Idaho Freedom Foundation
Institute for Liberty
James Madison Institute (FL)
The John K. MacIver Institute for Public Policy (WI)
The Latino Coalition
Less Government
Libertas Institute
Maine Heritage Policy Center
Maryland Public Policy Institute
Mississippi Center for Public Policy
National Center for Public Policy Research
Nevada Policy Research Institute
Rio Grande Foundation
R Street Institute
Tax Education Foundation of Iowa