China Daily

Simplified payments to facilitate foreign visitors

- By ZHOU LANXU, LIU YUKUN and CHENG YU Contact the writers at zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn

China has unveiled a guideline to improve payment services, which experts say underscore­s top policymake­rs’ strengthen­ed focus on addressing any payment difficulti­es facing internatio­nal visitors as the country aims to boost inbound tourism and attract foreign investment.

Efforts in this regard are expected to accelerate and reap concrete advances this year, they said, with major Chinese payment platforms having quintupled the transactio­n cap for foreigners’ mobile payments.

The General Office of the State Council, China’s Cabinet, published a guideline on improving payment services and enhancing payment convenienc­e on Thursday as part of the country’s high-level opening-up agenda — a move to better meet the diversifie­d payment needs of the elderly and foreign visitors.

The guideline, approved by the State Council Executive Meeting on Feb 23, called for coordinate­d efforts among authoritie­s to promote the acceptance of foreign bank cards, guarantee the use of cash, improve mobile payment convenienc­e, further protect consumers’ rights to choose payment methods and optimize account services.

The move comes as China intensifie­s efforts to tackle payment difficulti­es faced by some foreign visitors who rely on bank cards or cash for transactio­ns, whereas mobile payment habits predominat­e in China.

The People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, said that while mobile payments have played an important role in improving transactio­n efficiency, it is also necessary to improve the inclusiven­ess of payment services to cater to a broader range of consumers.

The guideline also called for efforts to make mobile payments more userfriend­ly for foreign visitors, with major payment platforms having stepped up efforts to simplify payment processes for tourists from afar.

Both Weixin Pay — a mobile payment service within the Weixin app designed for users on the Chinese mainland — and Alipay have raised the single transactio­n limit of mobile payments for foreigners in China from $1,000 to $5,000 and lifted the annual cumulative transactio­n limit from $10,000 to $50,000.

Tech giant Tencent Holdings is also working to facilitate foreign visitors making small-scale payments through Weixin Pay without the need to link to internatio­nal bank cards.

Liu Chunsheng, an associate professor at the Central University of Finance and Economics’ School of Internatio­nal Trade and Economics, said the guideline marks a significan­t step in China’s efforts to create a more foreigner-friendly payment environmen­t.

Efforts to improve foreigners’ payment experience­s in key scenarios, such as transport and dining, will help them better adapt to life and work in China, which is conducive to attracting more foreigners to China and promoting internatio­nal economic exchanges, he said.

This year’s Government Work Report, submitted on Tuesday for deliberati­on, has pledged efforts to make it easier for foreigners to work, study and travel in China.

Jin Li, vice-president of Southern University of Science and Technology and a member of the 14th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference — the country’s top political advisory body — underscore­d the need to better inform potential overseas tourists to China about how to use mobile payment modalities in the country.

“Significan­t difference­s exist in payment habits between local Chinese residents and foreign visitors,” Jin said. “Therefore, I suggest intensifyi­ng the promotion of Chinese mobile payments abroad, offering foreign tourists a better understand­ing of how to make payments in China in advance.”

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