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Canadians use various "payment instruments" to purchase goods and services, to make financial investments, and to transfer funds from one person to another. These instruments include cash, cheques, debit and credit cards, and e-money.
Except for cash, payment instruments involve a claim on a financial institution, such as a bank, credit union, or caisse populaire. Financial institutions therefore need arrangements to transfer funds among themselves, either on their own behalf or that of their customers. A payments system is the set of instruments, procedures, and rules used to transfer these funds.
The Canadian Payments Association is a not-for-profit organization created under the Canadian Payments Association Act. Its mandate is to establish and operate national systems for the clearing and settlement of payments. Learn more . . .
Payments go through two steps: first they are cleared, then they are settled. Clearing is the daily process by which CPA members exchange deposited payment items, and the net amounts owed to each other are then determined. Settlement is the procedure by which CPA members use funds on deposit at the Bank of Canada to fulfil their net obligations to all other members.
There are two systems in Canada through which all non-cash payments settle:
In 2004, the LVTS handled an average of 17,193 paymentsworth an average total of $130 billioneach day. Learn more . . .
In 2004, the ACSS handled an average of 19.8 million payment items per day, with an average total value of over $16.65 billion. Paper items accounted for 24.0 per cent of the volume and 70.0 per cent of the value cleared and settled, while electronic items made up about 76.0 per cent of the volume and 30.0 per cent of the value. Learn more . . .
Payments systems also play a role in clearing and settlement transactions involving assets such as securities, derivatives, and foreign exchange. For example, CDSX, operated by the Canadian Depository for Securities Limited, clears and settles trades in Canadian-dollar-denominated debt securities. The LVTS is used to make payments from those participants in CDSX with end-of-day net payment obligations and to make payments to those participants with end-of-day net claims.
Beyond its regulatory responsibilities under the Payment Clearing and Settlement Act, the Bank of Canada plays several other important roles in Canada's payments systems.
One such role comes in settling the positions among the participants in the LVTS and the ACSS. There are about a dozen financial institutions in these systems that have "settlement accounts" with the Bank. At the daily settlement times, the systems calculate the net amounts owing among the institutions, and those amounts are settled via entries to the institutions' accounts at the Bank.
Another important Bank role is to lend funds overnight to any institution that is unable to cover its LVTS or ACSS obligations on a given day. This is referred to as "providing liquidity."
Unlike central banks in many other countries, the Bank of Canada neither owns nor operates any of Canada's major payments systems. However, the Bank of Canada has a keen interest and involvement in these systems, for several reasons: