Summary:
Using data from the 2021 Diary of Consumer Payment Choice, this article investigates two questions: how do consumers without credit or debit cards make payments, and do consumers without these payment cards differ from other consumers?
Key findings:
- Consumers without cards use cash for three-quarters of their payments, compared to about one-fifth for consumers overall.
- Consumers without cards are four times as likely to use a prepaid card as other consumers and use these cards for 8 percent of their payments.
- Consumers without cards could rely on household members, other family, or friends to make online and bill payments.
- Most consumers have a credit or debit card: 93 percent of US consumers 18 and older.
- Consumers without cards have a lower median household income: $10,000. In contrast, consumers with credit cards have $75,000 median household income, and consumers with only debit cards have $35,000.
Center Affiliation: Economic Survey Research Center
JEL classification: D63, E42, J15
Key words: payment choice, payment card adoption, payments inclusion, unbanked
https://doi.org/10.29338/ph2022-10