Plastic card
Plastic cards usually serve as identity documents, thus providing authentication. In combination with other assets that complement the data stored on the card, like PINs, they also serve authorization purposes, most often as debit or credit cards for allowing their holders to do financial transactions. Early and simpler cards feature only hard-to-imitate integrated photographs, security holograms, guillochés, or a magnetic strip on which few bytes of personal data could be stored. Today, smart cards, i.e. those equipped with an electronic chip, serve as high-security active electronic documents that allow their holder to qualify for driving cars, receive medical treatment, do banking and more.
Industry
In their January 2020 report, the International Card Manufacturers Association's indicates a production increase to a record-high of 37.1 billion cards and $27 billion revenue in 2019. Forecasts predicted market growth at a rate of 8.2% from 2021 to 2028, which was counteracted by losses through the COVID-19 pandemic.Production
Plastic cards come in various colors and finishing. The laminated mixture of various dyes, paper and plastics and the integration with electronics makes them hard to recycle.Classification
Type
Range
- Contact cards
- Contactless cards
Techno
- Regular cards
- Chip-enabled cards
- Smart cards
- Digital card
- Magnetic stripe cards
Applications
- Gift cards
- Discount cards
- Access cards
- Payment cards
- *Credit cards
- *Debit cards
- Telephone cards
- Transportation cards
- Government/Health, e.g.
- *European Health Insurance Card,
- *Identity card,
- *Passport card
- SIM cards
Non-electronic security features