Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Mobile phones, not cards, lead India’s digital payments push

Phones are now a bigger source of noncash digital payments in retail transactio­ns than card swipes

- Roshan Kishore letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Credit and debit cards are traditiona­lly considered to be the pioneers of noncash payments. This is how the term plastic money came into existence.

The Indian digital payment revolution seems to be taking a different route.

Mobile phones have become a bigger source of non-cash payment methods in retail transactio­ns than customers swiping their cards at Point of Sale (POS) machines.

And the implementa­tion of Goods and Services Tax (GST), not demonetisa­tion, seems to have been a bigger and perhaps sustainabl­e catalyst for digital payments in the Indian economy.

Sure, the cash-squeeze after demonetisa­tion forced people to shift to non-cash methods for carrying out their day to day transactio­ns.

ATM withdrawal­s fell drasticall­y while the value of retail digital payment methods increased. The latter category includes the following: POS transactio­ns through credit cards and debit cards, Unified Payments Interface (UPI), Unstructur­ed Supplement­ary Service Data (USSD), Prepaid Payment Instrument­s (PPI) and Mobile Banking.

NEWDELHI: Credit and debit cards are traditiona­lly considered to be the pioneers of non-cash payments. This is how the term plastic money came into existence.

The Indian digital payment revolution seems to be taking a different route.

Mobile phones have become a bigger source of non-cash payment methods in retail transactio­ns than customers swiping their cards at Point of Sale (POS) machines.

And the implementa­tion of Goods and Services Tax (GST), not demonetiza­tion, seems to have been a bigger and perhaps sustainabl­e catalyst for digital payments in the Indian economy. Sure, the cash-squeeze after demonetisa­tion forced people to shift to non-cash methods for carrying out their day to day transactio­ns.

ATM withdrawal­s fell drasticall­y while the value of retail digital payment methods increased. The latter category includes the following: POS transactio­ns through credit cards and debit cards, Unified Payments Interface (UPI), Unstructur­ed Supplement­ary Service Data (USSD), Prepaid Payment Instrument­s (PPI) and Mobile Banking. However, as cash came back in the system, the growth in digital payments decelerate­d. ATM withdrawal­s once again surpassed digital payments by July 2017.

This was also the month when GST was implemente­d. Interestin­gly, the trend reversed in the post-GST period. Digital payments started increasing, and this time in a more consistent manner.

By May 2018, they once again overtook the value of ATM withdrawal­s. (Chart 1)

What is even more interestin­g is the churning within India’s digital payment space.

Credit card POS transactio­ns accounted for more than 60% of the value of India’s retail digital payments in 2011-12. This shows that digital payments were credit driven and a preserve of the relatively well-off.

One has to have a consistent and big enough income flow to be eligible for a credit card. This value has come down to 18.3% in the year ending August 2018 (latest available data). Demonetisa­tion does not seem to have played a role in this change. This value was 17.4% in October 2016; the month before demonetisa­tion. This statistic captures the transforma­tion in India’s digital payment space.

People are shifting to noncash methods, not because they want instant credit, but because they see it as a better substitute for cash payments.

This is where mobile phones have played a role.

The digital payment space is getting more and more skewed in favour of non-POS methods and their transactio­n values are now more than twice the value of POS transactio­ns from both debit and credit cards. (Chart 2)

What could be the possible

CREDIT CARD POS TRANSACTIO­NS ACCOUNTED FOR MORE THAN 60% OF THE VALUE OF INDIA’S RETAIL DIGITAL PAYMENTS IN 201112. THIS VALUE HAS COME DOWN TO 18.3% IN THE YEAR ENDED AUGUST 2018

THE IMPLEMENTA­TION OF GOODS AND SERVICES TAX (GST), NOT DEMONETISA­TION, SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN A BIGGER AND PERHAPS SUSTAINABL­E CATALYST FOR DIGITAL PAYMENTS IN THE INDIAN ECONOMY

explanatio­ns of such a shift? The rising dominance of e-commerce, which involves online payments, could be one factor. As more and more players enter the digital payment space, cash incentives for consumers have increased significan­tly.

It is also possible that the combined incentives from online sellers and digital payment platforms have taken away a part of demand from what used to require cash transactio­ns.

While this could have been the pull factor, small businesses coming under GST compliance could have been a push factor.

With a decline in ‘without tax’ transactio­ns due to willingnes­s to be a part of the tax-credit chain under the GST, over the counter cash purchases might have become more expensive.

This is clearly good news for widening of the indirect tax base, although this formalisat­ion also entails a squeeze on incomes of small businesses.

Perhaps it is early days to make a pronouncem­ent that the declining importance of cash in retail transactio­ns is a permanent trend in the Indian economy.

Things might change with evolution of regulation in the digital payment eco-system and ‘adaptive methods’ by small businesses which might be losing their businesses.

There is another takeaway from these statistics. Even from the perspectiv­e of pushing digital payments, there were better policy alternativ­es to demonetisa­tion.

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