Australia : ACCC Opposes Payment Options at New ‘Pay at the Pump’
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Monday, 02 February 2009 |
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The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has issued a draft
notice opposing Woolworths' and Australian Independent Retailers'
proposal to restrict payment options at their new pay at pump facility.
Woolworths and Australian Independent Retailers Pty Ltd (AIR), a
subsidiary of Woolworths Ltd., propose to introduce a pay at pump
facility at certain Caltex Woolworths and Caltex Safeway fuel outlets.
However, consumers will only be able to use the facility with a
Woolworths Everyday Money Credit Card (the EM Credit Card).
This is a contactless credit card issued by HSBC. Pay at pump
facilities already exist at a number of other petrol stations and
consumers have a range of payment options at these facilities. A
contactless card is embedded with a radio chip which allows the holder
to pass their card in front of a contactless payment reader to complete
a transaction, without swiping or dipping the card through or into a
machine.
"The proposal reduces consumer choice to one payment option (the EM
Credit Card) at Woolworths' pay at pump facilities," ACCC Chairman, Mr
Graeme Samuel, said. "The ACCC considers that the potential benefits to
consumers of the facility are significantly limited by restricting it
to holders of the EM Credit Card."
Mr Samuel said the ACCC is concerned that the arrangement will distort
the competitive process between card issuers, which would typically
compete on features such as interest rates, fees and reward programs. A
number of interested parties noted that the arrangement is inconsistent
with the card schemes' 'honour all issuers' principle. In the ACCC's
view, this means the arrangement reduces the utility of payment
products to both issuers and consumers.
Woolworths and interested parties now have time to lodge submissions in
response to the draft notice, before the ACCC decides whether to issue
final notices revoking the notifications.
PetrolWorld 310109
Editors Notes
Information available from the ACCC's website, www.accc.gov.au (follow
the Public Registers and Authorisations and Notifications Registers
links)
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