Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VISA, OTHER payment firms fight for role in disbursing aid.

- JENNY SURANE AND ROBERT SCHMIDT

The world’s largest payment companies are fighting for their own piece of the U.S. coronaviru­s stimulus: an assignment to help distribute some of the relief money that will be sent to millions of Americans in the coming weeks.

Visa Inc. and Mastercard Inc. are lobbying the Treasury Department to be included in the options that the agency uses to disburse funds, as are smaller firms PayPal Holdings Inc. and Square Inc. Their argument is if the government is looking to get money quickly and safely to families across the country, it needs to get with the 21st century.

“The features of the modern payments world are ideally suited to help here,” said Jodie Kelley, chief executive officer of the Washington­based Electronic Transactio­ns Associatio­n, which represents more than 500 companies in the industry. “We are fast, we are secure and no one has to touch anything.”

Getting picked for the program would be a boon for payment companies, which often levy fees each time money is sent on their networks. The firms have been battered by the slowdown in consumer spending as government­s around the world ordered people to stay home and businesses to close.

Most firms lobbying the Treasury Department have offered a discount from what they normally charge. One option, according to a person familiar with the matter, would be negotiatin­g a flat fee for the work, rather than charging per individual.

The Treasury Department hasn’t announced how it plans to disburse the checks. It will probably deposit funds directly into bank accounts using informatio­n it has from taxpayers, and Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on CBS’ Face the Nation on Sunday that the payments may begin arriving within three weeks.

By some estimates 14 million people in the U.S. don’t have bank accounts, and many others still get refunds from the Internal Revenue Service by check, meaning the government doesn’t have their bank informatio­n.

The relief bill includes direct payments to low- and middle-income Americans, expands unemployme­nt benefits, and gives many companies access to emergency financing and tax breaks. Hoping to stave off an economic collapse, the Treasury Department is pushing to get the money out quickly. Depending on income, a person can receive as much as $1,200, plus $500 per child.

Visa and Mastercard have spent years building out two new networks — Visa Direct and Mastercard Send — which can instantly deposit funds into billions of bank accounts around the world.

“We believe we have an opportunit­y and responsibi­lity to help support the efforts to respond to and recover from this crisis,” said Seth Eisen, a spokesman for Mastercard. He said the company doesn’t have any insight into how the government will decide to distribute the money. “We stand ready to help.”

PayPal and Square are pushing their digital wallets — PayPal, Venmo and Square Cash — as other options. The wallets have become a popular alternativ­e to bank accounts for U.S. consumers in recent years.

A spokeswoma­n for Square pointed to a tweet from CEO Jack Dorsey last week asking the government to let the company help with the disburseme­nts.

A Treasury Department spokesman didn’t reply to a request for comment, while a spokesman for Visa declined to comment. A representa­tive for PayPal confirmed that the company is in talks with the department.

Being included in the unpreceden­ted payout could help electronic payment companies with a longer-term goal: getting more ingrained into the federal benefits system.

While direct deposit is often the most popular way to receive government assistance, agencies have been increasing­ly turning to prepaid cards and other forms of electronic payments as a cheaper alternativ­e to checks. In recent weeks, lobbyists for prepaid card providers have also sought to play a role in the stimulus disburseme­nts.

Federal, state and local government agencies disbursed $137 billion through prepaid cards in 2018, or 2% of total expenditur­es, according to a September report by the Federal Reserve. The Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, which used to be known as food stamps, sent the largest share.

As the lobbying continues, one issue that the payment companies are trying to sidestep is that President Donald Trump seems to like the symbolism of Americans receiving a check in the mail. He has said he wants his name to be on the checks, or at least on a letter accompanyi­ng the money to show that it’s from him, according to people familiar with the matter.

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