Impact, criticism and regulation
The rise of BNPL services such as Afterpay has been cited as a cause of decreasing credit card use in Australia.[39]
Millennials are Afterpay's main customer demographic, accounting for 75% of all users.[40] Another significant segment of Afterpay's customer base is university students, of which one third have been found to use short-term borrowing.[41] Afterpay has also been criticized as being harmful to consumers. Studies have found that in order to keep up with payments, some users experience financial stress, incurring debt and neglecting essential needs.[42][43] Market commentators suggest that while BNPL payment options (such as Afterpay and its competitors) are showing significant upside for investors, such growth may not be sustained unless the company continues to show that it is able to generate larger basket sizes (i.e., extra sales that consumers would not otherwise have made).[44]
In 2018, Afterpay announced it earned 24.4% of its income from late fees and 75.6% from merchant fees.[45] From 2018 to 2019, the number of credit card accounts dropped nearly 5% from 16.7 million to 15.89 million,[46] with 69% of millennials using their credit card less as a result of Afterpay.[47]
In April 2019, legislation was passed to provide the Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) with "Product Intervention Powers" (PIP). These powers provide ASIC with authority to intervene where it identifies a risk of significant detriment to retail consumers (including those using BNPL services like Afterpay).[48][49] Afterpay supported the introduction of these powers as a way to provide regulatory oversight and protect consumers.[50] In June 2019, the company disclosed that it was under probe by AUSTRAC for potential breaches of the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act 2006 (AML/CTF regulations). The company was said to be "in dialogue" with the regulators, and the outcome of the probe has yet to be determined.[51] AUSTRAC, upon identifying several concerns with its compliance, ordered the appointment of an external auditor at Afterpay's expense to examine its compliance with the AML/CTF regulations.[11][52]
In February 2020, Afterpay was reported to have 3.6 million active customers in the U.S., 3.1 million in Australia and New Zealand, and 600,000 in the U.K.[56] In November 2020, the ASIC released a report on the BNPL industry, highlighting the need for consumer protections via existing and impending regulatory changes, yet did not call for any new regulation.
The Australian Finance Industry Association's Code of Practice, which came into effect on 1 March 2021, is voluntary, so it does not have the teeth of financial regulation.[57] BNPL platforms charge no interest to its customers, and hence are not subject to Australia's Credit Act.[57] However, during June 2022, the Albanese Government announced that it planned to regulate the BNPL sector under the Credit Act.[58]
In November 2023, Afterpay came under fire on A Current Affair for holding funds from allegedly high-risk businesses, causing a liquidity crisis for many small businesses. Small businesses are at a particularly high risk of having their cash reserves depleted due to delayed payment from Afterpay, often as much as three months.[59][60] Afterpay's use of a 'rolling reserve' means that individual businesses can be out tens of thousands for up to three months, with these funds only gradually released in the form of micropayments e.g. $50 at a time, but not the interest on these funds. Customer use of Afterpay is so high for some businesses, however, that opting out may translate to significant lost business.[61]