COVID是否改变了消费者的支付行为?

C. Greene, Ellen Merry, Joanna Stavins
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引用次数: 4

摘要

COVID-19大流行导致消费者支出发生巨大变化,包括人们的付款方式。我们使用2018年和2019年COVID之前以及2020年COVID期间收集的具有全国代表性的美国消费者调查数据来分析大流行期间消费者支付行为的变化。我们发现,与2019年的支付行为相比,到2020年秋季,消费者已将部分购物从面对面转移到网上,大大降低了现金购物的使用,并将个人对个人(P2P)支付从纸质支付(现金和支票)转移到网上。这些变化与我们的预期一致,因为许多人不太能够或不太愿意亲自购物。电子P2P的采用增加了,特别是使用PayPal、Venmo和Zelle等支付应用程序。即使在我们控制了收入和教育水平之后,在COVID期间完全在家工作的消费者在网上或通过移动设备支付的比例要高得多,而且与那些至少部分亲自工作的消费者相比,他们使用现金的可能性更小。相比之下,2018年至2019年发生的支付行为变化规模较小,基本上微不足道,这表明COVID可能加速了任何长期趋势。虽然现在确定这些变化是否会长期持续还为时过早,但我们在大流行爆发几个月后观察到了这些变化,因此它们肯定不仅仅是暂时的变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Has COVID changed consumer payment behavior?
: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused large changes in consumer spending, including how people make their payments. We use data from a nationally representative survey of U.S. consumers collected before COVID in 2018 and 2019 and during COVID in 2020 to analyze changes in consumer payment behavior during the pandemic. We find that compared with their payment behavior in 2019, consumers had shifted some of their purchases from in person to online by fall 2020, significantly lowered their use of cash for purchases, and shifted their person-to-person (P2P) payments away from paper (cash and checks). Those changes are consistent with what we might expect, as many people were less able or willing to shop in person. The adoption of electronic P2P increased, especially the use of payment apps such as PayPal, Venmo, and Zelle. Consumers who worked exclusively from home during COVID made significantly higher shares of their payments online or through mobile devices and were less likely to use cash at all compared with those who worked at least partly in person, even after we control for income and education levels. In contrast, payment-behavior changes that took place from 2018 to 2019 were smaller in magnitude and largely insignificant, suggesting that COVID likely accelerated any longer-term trends. Although it is too soon to determine whether these changes will persist for the longer term, we observed them several months after the onset of the pandemic, so they certainly were not just temporary shifts.
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