Market Size Estimate For Contactless Payments Hardware, Software
ABI Research has published a new research study titled "RFID Contactless Payments" that estimates industry spending on contactless payments hardware and software will reach $870 million by 2011, up from just $260 million in 2006 - a compound annual growth rate of 27%.
“Initial contactless payments deployments have already shown the ability to speed transactions and capture previously cash-only transactions for financial service networks,” says senior analyst Jonathan Collins.Two key applications are now driving adoption: proprietary transportation ticketing, and open credit, debit, and e-purse payments tied to financial service networks. At present, transportation ticketing represents the majority of contactless payment adoption around the world, but that position will be overtaken by adoption of open systems payments within the next few years.
However, uptake is taking place at varying rates across regions, national markets and market segments, as contactless payments are added to existing payment networks and environments. “In North America, open system payments are driving the contactless adoption,” says Collins. “In Europe contactless ticketing systems are spurring interest in contactless payments, but it is in Japan and South Korea that contactless technology is making the greatest headway. Built on the foundations of contactless transportation ticketing and with the additional boost from contactless payment-enabled mobile handsets, these markets are leading the way in realizing the potential for contactless payments.”
Elsewhere, while mobile handsets will develop to enable contactless payments, ongoing debate over how payment applications will be deployed and managed on wireless handsets has delayed the rollout of mobile handset contactless payments in the US and Europe.
Such hurdles slow contactless technology’s evolution from promising first deployments to a widely used, mainstream payment technology. Technology and business issues must be resolved to see open systems on mobile handsets and accepted at existing contactless-equipped transportation installations. In addition, consumers have to be comfortable with the use of the technology and confident in the security of contactless payments.






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