Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Aadhaar ruling puts fintech firms in a spot

- Komal Gupta

NEW DELHI: With the Supreme Court barring private companies from seeking Aadhaar data, digital payments companies may lobby with the finance and law ministries to formulate a law that will allow them access to the biometric database.

The judgment will have an adverse impact on the digital payments industry, especially for small fintech companies and startups, which have low-cost business models and use Aadhaar for customer verificati­on, said Vishwas Patel, chairman of Payments Council of India (PCI), the industry body representi­ng all digital payments companies in India.

“We expect to find a way to get payments companies to use the Aadhaar database for doing E-KYC (know-your-customer) and e-signatures, while taking into considerat­ion the privacy concerns as identified by the apex court. We also expect that the government still has the scope to formulate a law in this regard.”

Fintech startups selling loans, mutual funds and insurance, as well as payments banks, which used Aadhaar authentica­tion as part of their electronic infrastruc­ture, are also expected to be affected.

“That portion of Section 57 of the Aadhaar Act, which enables body corporate and individual­s to seek authentica­tion is held to be unconstitu­tional,” a five-member constituti­on bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra said in its judgment on Wednesday.

Section 57 of the Aadhaar (targeted delivery of financial and other subsidies, benefits and services) Act, 2016 allows the use of the unique ID for establishi­ng the identity of an individual for any purpose, whether by the state or corporate or person. The provision has been read down by the court and only allows the government to use Aadhaar for various social welfare schemes.

According to Patel, after extensive consultati­ons, especially the part of the judgment pertaining to Section 57, the industry body will approach both the finance and law ministries and seek their guidance on the matter.

“Going back to traditiona­l way of verificati­on of customers is riskier than the Aadhaar-based one. It will lead to misplaceme­nt of physical copies of identity proofs of customers which is a greater threat to privacy.”

According to an industry expert, requesting anonymity, the move is also likely to increase the on-boarding cost of these firms. It could increase the cost from ₹15 per person, which is the current cost of E-KYC verificati­on, to ₹100 per person for a physical KYC.

Informatio­n and technology minister Ravi Shankar Prasad has urged the fintech industry not to panic and said that the government will look into the matter and bring in a law, if needed.

 ?? MINT ?? The judgment will have an adverse impact on the digital payments industry
MINT The judgment will have an adverse impact on the digital payments industry

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India