Smartphones Could Take the Place of Credit Cards

By
YOUNG MONEY Staff
7 August 2010
Some early applications merging mobile phones with credit payments already exist, including a device that turns an iPhone into a credit card reader.
BusinessWeek was not able to elaborate on the technical details of the new system, which will apparently be tested in Atlanta and three other cities. The report did say that many major retailers would welcome it, since the companies resent the major payment networks' transaction fees.
Visa and MasterCard controlled 79 percent of the $3.1 trillion in U.S. consumer credit and debit spending last year, but the widespread adoption of cellphones may end up undermining that.
Other nations are far ahead of the U.S. in terms of mobile banking and payment, and Mastercard has actually helped implement such systems in Japan, Turkey and the U.S., according to BusinessWeek.
Of course, the new technology does leave one unanswered question - if your cellphone becomes your credit card, how do you pay your phone bill?
Tag Cloud
Beck Bamberger
career
career coach
Careers
collection agency
credit card
credit report
credit score
debt
debt consolidation
debt counseling
Derek Hoffman
employment
entrepreneur profile
Entrepreneurship
Facebook
financial literacy
find a job
get out of debt
health insurance
internet scams
Investing
Laura Tirello
life coach
marketing
Mike Michalowicz
Money Management
new company
paying for college
personal finance
recession
save money
saving money
Shopping
social media
start a business
student loans
the edge
Toilet Paper Entrepreneur
Travel
unemployment
video
Wall St Cheat Sheet
young entrepreneur
young entrepreneurs
Financial help Center







