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by rswail
1145 days ago
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Unlike most of the world, where when a Chip+PIN or contactless payment is made, where the risk is transferred from the merchant to the acquirer/issuer. That was the whole point of moving to EMV, it removes the fraud risk from the merchant. That's different to the charge-back risk, which is where the customer disputes the transaction itself. |
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In parts of the world where the consumer's bank bears the risk, and there is in imbalance between commercial and consumer banking, there is a powerful group--consumer banks--to apply pressure.
Sometimes that results in fewer consumer protections. In most: indirect pressure on merchants. (I can think of no country with an imbalance in favor of commercial banking with a strong consumer sector.) This state describes most of the world: optimized for cost reduction.
> That was the whole point of moving to EMV, it removes the fraud risk from the merchant
Who bears fraud risk varies.
In America, it was always the merchants. They have limited leverage over Visa and Mastercard. With the banks neutral and a valid competitor in American Express, there was nobody who wanted to anger consumers by taking away their swipes. (If you're that merchant, you're cash only.) So they optimized for purchasing convenience.
Australia is a cost optimizer. America a convenience optimizer.