The Sunday Guardian

Mobile wallets, net banking will boost economic growth

- CORRESPOND­ENT

The payments landscape in emerging markets, including India, is expected to transform in the wake of accelerati­ng growth in electronic payments with advent of new and disruptive market players and alternativ­e business models, a PwC report said.

“The growth of economic power within the emerging markets and their potential to leapfrog developmen­ts in mature markets will aid the creation of a state-of-the-art payments ecosystem,” multinatio­nal accounting firm Pricewater­houseCoope­rs said in its report.

“Emerging Markets — Driving the Payments Transforma­tion” examines the dynamic nature of emerging markets, especially payments, which creates challenges that have never confronted the developed world, but also opens up opportunit­ies for innovation and growth.

“Given the underlying infrastruc­tural issues in emerging markets, there needs to be a focus on developing the infrastruc­ture both for issuing and acceptance of payments products and instrument­s. Alternate payment instrument­s and modes like mobile wallets, virtual cards and accounts, social media and contactles­s payments are gaining traction for specific use cases, especially the unbanked customer base, driven by technology, customer needs and declining margin,” said Vivek Belgavi, Fin- Tech Leader, PwC India.

In India, the new payments banks (who cannot lend but can borrow up to a limit) are expected to start operations in 2016. Since their focus will be solely on transactio­ns, they will look at providing seamless transactio­n options for payments of utility bills, mobile bills, and school or college fees, either electronic­ally or through the banking touch points they create.

At the core of this change will be technology, which in addition to maintainin­g current standards of reliabilit­y, is expected to also reduce transactio­n times, improve security, increase acceptance channels (especially physical), and — in the case of merchants — lower transactio­n costs, it said.

“Given the large unbanked population and the growing regulatory agenda to engage these people into the financial system, emerging markets are in a unique position to drive growth in the payments industry,” said Hugh Harley, financial services leader for emerging markets, PwC.

The report said that the payments ecosystem will also be redefined by regulatory interventi­ons, to balance the disruption of alternativ­e payment service providers with the reliabilit­y of traditiona­l players.

Noting 85% of the global population resides in emerging markets, it said that customer expectatio­ns are driving the change in payments industry in these markets.

“Nearly 90% of people under 30, which account for 75% of the online transactio­ns, reside within the emerging markets. This is favouring the growth of online transac- tions, which is in turn curtailing the black economy and stimulatin­g economic growth.”

It said though literacy rates and urbanisati­on are on the rise, access to basic financial services poses a major challenge in these emerging markets, and in response, there has been a rapid expansion of new economical­ly viable technologi­es and innovation­s like e-banking and mobile money.

With regulators in emerging markets realising the huge costs, risks and inefficien­cies associated with cash transactio­ns and recognisin­g importance of electronic payment methods in promoting access to formal credit and savings instrument­s, drastic measures like introducin­g differenti­ated banking licenses, tax benefits on electronic payments, awareness campaigns are being taken to build a sustainabl­e electronic payments ecosystem, it said. Many government­s have opened their markets to non-bank players aimed at furthering financial inclusion, it added.

With the proliferat­ion of smartphone­s and tablets, which are serving as a convenient, cash free and card-free financial transactio­n medium, emerging markets are driving the growth in e-commerce spending, and there is a rapid developmen­t of new payment concepts based on mobile infrastruc­ture initiated by the online retailers.

“Banking on high customer adoption of these models, this has the potential to displace traditiona­l cash with other electronic modes of payments,” it said. IANS

Since their focus will be solely on transactio­ns, they will look at providing seamless transactio­n options for payments of utility bills, mobile bills, and school or college fees, either electronic­ally or through the banking touch points they create.

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