New Straits Times

‘RUSSIA, CHINA MULL UNIFIED PAYMENT SYSTEMS’

Moscow eyes ways to further cut dependence on Western services, says prime minister

-

RUSSIA and China were considerin­g linking their national payment system, said Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev yesterday, as he called for a more balanced global finance structure.

Noting the rise of China’s Unionpay system and Beijing’s efforts to internatio­nalise its currency, the yuan, Medvedev said at a press conference, here, that Russia was developing its own payment system, known as Karta Mir.

“At the present moment it is being discussed whether Karta Mir should be linked to Chinese payment systems,” he said, while standing alongside Chinese Premier Li Keqiang.

That would have “good prospects” and “avoid those problems that sometimes arise when you use American payment systems”, Medvedev said, mentioning Visa and Mastercard without elaboratin­g.

Russia started to create the Karta Mir system after Western sanctions were imposed on the country in 2014, during the Ukraine crisis.

The system is now widely accepted in Russia.

After new United States sanctions were imposed, Moscow promised to intensify work to cut dependence on Western payment systems further.

Among other things, it wants to create more domestic financial services such as its own ratings agency.

“I think that the more financial instrument­s there are in the modern world, the more stable the global financial system will be,” said Medvedev.

Visa and MasterCard stopped providing services to clients of one Russian bank after Washington imposed sanctions over Moscow’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine and support of proRussian separatist­s in eastern Ukraine.

Around 14 million Mir cards, which translates as “World” or “Peace”, have been issued in Russia, according to the Russian National System of Payment Cards (NSPK), or about 10 per cent of the country’s population.

NSPK was establishe­d in 2014 and is 100 per cent owned by the central bank.

More than 380 banks working in Russia accept the cards, which are issued by 120 banks.

Practicall­y all trade and service points, including cafes, shops, restaurant­s and petrol stations, accept them. Reuters

 ??  ?? Dmitry Medvedev
Dmitry Medvedev

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia