How the Proposed Payments Legislation Will Restrain Competition Among Payment Card Schemes and Harm Consumers in the European Union

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
David S. Evans
2018 ◽  
pp. 48-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. V. Trofimov

The article analyzes tendencies of national payment systems development in the European Union and Russia: electronic and deposit money, bank cards, financial technologies in the field of retail payments. The author identifies factors that stimulate the development of cashless retail payments and the national payment card systems in the European Union, as well as the problems and prospects of this sector forming in Russia. Recommendations on the development of a competitive environment and financial technologies in the field of retail payments in Russia are proposed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
pp. 02019
Author(s):  
Magdalena Atanasova

The security of non-cash payment instruments is a key factor for the economic stability of the European Union. Crime with electronic payment instruments and related illegal activities affect the Digital Single Market and the financial interests of the European Union. Organized crime groups generate € 1.44 billion a year in the Community from payment card fraud, with illegal proceeds reinvested in illegal activity and not recovered. The current scientific article aims to assess an ex-post impact of European policies for combating payment card fraud and counterfeiting on the stakeholders, in particular payment process participants. The goal is to establish the policy efficiency by analyzing the cost and benefits of the specific policy for the participants. A methodology has been developed, based on a multidisciplinary approach. The following scientific methods are used: case study; research and review of legal and other documents; content analysis of strategic and annual reports and assessments; analysis of qualitative indicators and secondary analysis of empirical data. The results of the survey show that the cost of crime prevention and control measures is high, but responsibility for costs is shared between the public and private sectors, and consumers. Strengthening cooperation between stakeholders will lead to higher policy benefits and lower costs.


Author(s):  
Herman Lelieveldt ◽  
Sebastiaan Princen

2000 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 245-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luigi Leonori ◽  
Manuel Muñoz ◽  
Carmelo Vázquez ◽  
José J. Vázquez ◽  
Mary Fe Bravo ◽  
...  

This report concerns the activities developed by the Mental Health and Social Exclusion (MHSE) Network, an initiative supported by the Mental Health Europe (World Federation of Mental Health). We report some data from the preliminary survey done in five capital cities of the European Union (Madrid, Copenhagen, Brussels, Lisbon, and Rome). The main aim of this survey was to investigate, from a mostly qualitative point of view, the causal and supportive factors implicated in the situation of the homeless mentally ill in Europe. The results point out the familial and childhood roots of homelessness, the perceived causes of the situation, the relationships with the support services, and the expectations of future of the homeless mentally ill. The analysis of results has helped to identify the different variables implicated in the social rupture process that influences homelessness in major European cities. The results were used as the basis for the design of a more ambitious current research project about the impact of the medical and psychosocial interventions in the homeless. This project is being developed in 10 capital cities of the European Union with a focus on the program and outcome evaluation of the health and psychosocial services for the disadvantaged.


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