June 30, 2025

ABA: ABA Expresses Strong Support for Treasury’s Effort to Increase Efficiency in the Payments System in New Letter

In a new letter to the Department of Treasury today, the American Bankers Association expressed strong support for the administration’s effort to increase the efficiency of the payment system while at the same time improving its security and providing an enhanced service to the public. The letter, written in response to the agency’s Request for Information regarding modernizing payments to and from the United States government, outlines recommendations to help Treasury achieve its goal of transitioning all federal payments that are currently made by paper check—including Social Security benefits, tax refunds and vendor payments—to be made electronically by September 20, 2025. 

“We strongly support the effort to increase the efficiency of the payment system while at the same time improving its security and providing an enhanced service to the public,” ABA wrote. “Removing the paper check from the payment system will result in a cheaper, faster, and more secure payment system.”

ABA explained that one of the critical barriers preventing many payees from receiving electronic payments is the lack of a bank account. To address this, ABA made several detailed recommendations to promote Bank On accounts, which are safe low-cost accounts that enable individuals to enter the financial system to get paid more efficiently and make use of conventional products such as debit cards.

ABA recommended that Treasury promote Bank On-certified accounts to new recipients of federal payments who do not have a bank account as well as current recipients of paper checks. “Individuals without bank accounts would be able to review the list of nearly 500 available Bank On account providers with the knowledge that the accounts are certified to be safe and low-cost,” ABA wrote. 

The association made several other recommendations to Treasury including: 

Read the full letter

This post was originally published here.