帐单付款的消费者付款选择

C. Greene, J. Stavins
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引用次数: 4

摘要

为什么美国消费者会这样支付账单?根据最近一份消费者支付行为日记的数据,我们发现,除了账单的美元价值、个人的人口统计和收入状况外,消费者支付的账单类型和支付方式(在线支付还是自动支付)是决定支付方式的重要因素。相比之下,美元价值和人口统计属性是决定购买支付工具选择的最重要因素。消费者对账单支付的选择在一定程度上受到商家施加的要求的约束,而购买支付工具的选择则不受这些要求的约束。自动支付和在线支付提供的便利和速度并没有平等地惠及所有美国消费者。没有银行账户的消费者无法使用大多数支付方式,因此,他们使用现金或预付卡来支付账单。低收入消费者支付账单的方式与其他样本不同:他们更有可能亲自付款,使用更多的现金,而且不太可能设置自动或在线支付账单,无论他们是否有银行账户。尽管消费者在日记中指明了他们喜欢用哪种方式来支付账单,但实际上他们不太可能按照自己陈述的偏好行事。我们发现,在我们控制了收入、人口统计属性、账单金额和商家类型之后,在线支付账单的消费者不太可能偏离他们首选的支付方式,而自动支付账单的消费者更有可能偏离。我们没有发现Sexton(2015)在能源消耗方面发现的自动账单支付显著效应的证据。相反,我们发现自动支付账单的消费者比低收入消费者收入更高,花费更多,但自动支付账单的平均价值更低,这与塞克斯顿(2015)的发现相反。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Consumer Payment Choice for Bill Payments
Why do US consumers pay their bills the way they do? Using data from a recent diary of consumer payment behavior, we find that the type of bill consumers are paying and how they are paying (online or automatically) are important factors in determining the payment method, in addition to the dollar value of the bill and the demographic and income profile of the individual who is paying. In contrast, dollar value and demographic attributes are found to be the most important factors determining the payment instrument chosen for purchases. Consumer choices for bill payments are somewhat constrained by requirements imposed by merchants, while the choice of payment instrument for purchases is not constrained by such requirements. The convenience and speed provided by automatic and online payments are not benefitting all US consumers equally. Unbanked consumers lack access to most payment methods and, hence, use cash or prepaid cards to pay their bills. Low-income consumers pay their bills differently from the rest of the sample: They are more likely to pay in person, use significantly more cash, and are less likely to set up automated or online bill payments, regardless of whether they have a bank account. Although consumers specify in the diary which methods they prefer to use to pay their bills, in practice they are not likely to act consistently with their stated preferences. We find that consumers who pay their bills online are less likely to deviate from their preferred payment method, while those who pay their bills automatically are more likely to deviate, after we control for income, demographic attributes, the dollar amount of the bill, and the merchant type. We find no evidence of the salience effect of automatic bill payments that Sexton (2015) finds for energy consumption. Rather, we find that consumers who pay their bills automatically have higher incomes and spend more on bills than lower-income consumers do, but that automatic bill payments are lower in value on average, which is the opposite of the finding by Sexton (2015).
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