Mexican Payment System Reforms
By: Sujit "Bob" Chakravorti
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Financial Industry Studies
Since the late 1980s, Mexico has engaged in a series of far-reaching financial and economic reforms. These reforms include the privatization of its banks and other state-owned enterprises, interest rate deregulation, an easing of reserve requirements, reductions in restrictions on trade and foreign bank entry, and an overhaul of the payments systems. This article investigates the ongoing payments system reforms that Mexico began in 1994.
The safe and efficient transfer of monetary value in exchange for goods, services, and financial assets is vital to any market economy. The apparatus used to transfer monetary value is the payments system. For the purpose of analysis, the payments system as a whole can be divided into large-value and small-value systems. Large-value, or wholesale, payments systems are primarily used to transfer funds between banks, and the average value of each transfer is relatively large. Folkerts-Landau, Garber, and Lane (1994) list the important functions of large-value systems: to provide the necessary infrastructure for the intermediation of household and business payments, to enable more efficient liquidity management by banks, to assist the development of security markets, and to allow for more effective implementation of monetary policy. The primary thrust of payments system reform in Mexico thus far has concentrated on large-value systems.
Small-value, or retail, payments systems process relatively small payments among consumers and businesses. Retail payment instruments include cash, checks, automated clearinghouse payments, credit and debit cards,and, more recently, electronic money. Pingitzer and Summers (1994) state that “the efficient operation of a market economy depends on the availability of a smoothly functioning small-value transfer system that connects all economic agents.”
Although financial analysts agree that large-value payments systems should be safe and efficient, there is little consensus on their optimal design and operation. Major differences exist in the types of large-value payments systems employed in developed countries. As a result, developing countries seeking to enhance their integration with international capital markets face difficulty in identifying the most appropriate blueprint for strengthening their own large-value systems. Mexico provides an interesting example of the recent push to enhance the safety and efficiency of large-value payments systems in emerging financial markets.
In early 1994, the Bank of Mexico, the central bank of Mexico, proposed reforming its payments system. The goals of these reforms are to decrease the amount of unsecured intraday credit it extends to banks over the large-value interbank payments system, to promote market discipline in the determination of credit exposures related to the payments system, and to move large-value transactions away from checks to electronic systems. The first two goals are designed to reduce payments system risk, while the last one is aimed at increasing efficiency.
Progress has been made on each of these fronts. Except under certain circumstances, the Bank of Mexico no longer extends uncollateralized intraday credit to settle payments on its large-value payments system. Instead, to maintain adequate liquidity while imposing market discipline, the Bank of Mexico implemented a net large-value payments system, in which participants send payments based on intraday lines of credit they extend to one another. In addition, the Bank of Mexico has successfully promoted this system as an alternative to high-value checks. However, some challenges remain for the Bank of Mexico in implementing the desired market discipline in the intraday credit market.