What Does the Battle Over Payment Methods Really Reflect?



Recently, there has been a lot of discussion around different regional payment habits. It appears to be a "resistance" issue, but upon deeper analysis, it is more a triangular game involving market ecology, cost structure, and usage habits.

Let's start with the policy aspect. According to the relevant financial regulatory agencies' system updates by the end of 2025, although six major retail payment systems have been designated, there are no bans on various stored-value payment tools at the policy level. In other words, this is not a policy pressure.

So why do merchants still choose traditional methods? Data provides the answer. Many small and medium-sized retailers mainly use cash and credit cards. The reason is very practical—the transaction fees for mobile payment platforms usually consume 0.6% to 1.2% of the transaction amount. For low-margin retail businesses, this cost is not insignificant. Plus, the costs of system upgrades and the fact that about 23% of merchants have experienced transaction failures make conservative choices understandable.

But the most interesting thing is that the power of history and habits is often greater than we imagine. A local card system in a certain area has been operating for over twenty years, with a circulation of more than 40 million cards, an average of over 5 cards per person, and a daily transaction volume of over 15 million. This level of penetration has gone beyond being just a payment tool; it has become part of daily life. Coupled with a local bank card penetration rate close to 98% and an average of more than 3 credit cards per person, a mature payment ecosystem has been established for many years.

So there’s really nothing mysterious about it. Market choices often stem from the most practical considerations—cost, risk, and habits. These factors, layered together, create behaviors that seem "stubborn," but are actually rational results.
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AirdropJunkievip
· 12h ago
Basically, it's about money. A fee of 0.6% to 1.2% can really wipe out small merchants. People are rational; no one wants to bother with things they're used to. Twenty years of system accumulation—that's the moat.
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SchrodingerAirdropvip
· 12h ago
Basically, it's just an economic calculation. A 0.6-1.2% fee is really painful for small merchants. Once a mature payment ecosystem is established, it's hard to shake, and that's the core. The power of habit is indeed strong, but fundamentally it's still a cost consideration. Having used the system for over twenty years, there's no reason to bother changing. What seems like resistance is actually a rational choice.
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TommyTeacher1vip
· 12h ago
Basically, it's still about money. The 0.6% to 1.2% transaction fee can really crush small merchants. Habits are hard to change; twenty-plus years of accumulation can't be changed overnight. Cost is the key; policies are just虚的. This analysis is quite practical, without too many twists and turns. A generation's payment habits, can they change just like that? Dream on.
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OnchainSnipervip
· 12h ago
Basically, it's still about money. A fee of 0.6-1.2% is really a killer for small merchants.
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GhostAddressMinervip
· 12h ago
Wait, a 0.6-1.2% fee can explain everything? The truth about on-chain flows is much more than that... So who is really controlling the liquidity behind the 40 million cards?
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