Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago / Occasional Paper; Emerging Payments
Raw citation data, Impact Factor, Immediacy Index, Published documents, Citations received, , Most cited papers , Latest citations and documents published in this series in EconPapers.
  Most cited documents in this series: (1) RePEc:fip:fedhop:eps-2001-1 Who pays for credit cards? (2001). Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago / Occasional Paper; Emerging Payments Cited: 18 times. (2) RePEc:fip:fedhop:eps-2001-2 A study of the interrelated bilateral transactions in credit card networks (2001). Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago / Occasional Paper; Emerging Payments Cited: 6 times. (3) RePEc:fip:fedhop:eps-2001-4 Competition and innovation in the consumer e-payments market? considering the demand, supply, and public policy issues (2001). Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago / Occasional Paper; Emerging Payments Cited: 4 times. (4) RePEc:fip:fedhop:eps-2000-1 Why dont consumers use electronic banking products? towards a theory of obstacles, incentives, and opportunities (2000). Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago / Occasional Paper; Emerging Payments Cited: 1 times. Latest citations received in: | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 Latest citations received in: 2003 Latest citations received in: 2002 Latest citations received in: 2001 (1) RePEc:fip:fednep:y:2001:i:dec:p:35-50:n:v.7no.3 Personal on-line payments (2001). Economic Policy Review (2) RePEc:wpa:wuwpio:0108001 The Determinants of Optimal Interchange Fees in Payment Systems (2001). EconWPA / Industrial Organization Latest citations received in: 2000 Warning!! This is still an experimental service. The results of this service should be interpreted with care, especially in research assessment exercises. The processing of documents is automatic. There still are errors and omissions in the identification of references. We are working to improve the software to increase the accuracy of the results. Source data used to compute the impact factor of RePEc series.
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