The Star Malaysia

Obstacles on the road to cashless society

-

IF you visit Bank Negara’s website on e-payment and debit card use, you will be surprised by the virtues stated there of using these payment systems.

In fact, Bank Negara had included e-payment as part of the nine focus areas in the Financial Sector Blueprint 2011-2020. The main reason was to accelerate the realisatio­n of this country’s vision of being a high valueadded, high income nation with adequate capacity to preserve financial stability.

In line with the Blueprint, Bank Negara aims to increase the number of e-payment transactio­ns per capita from 44 transactio­ns to 200 transactio­ns, and reduce cheque usage by more than half from 207 million to 100 million per year by 2020.

To achieve this objective, a national e-payment roadshow was initiated in April this year to create awareness among individual­s and businesses of the benefits of e-payment, its features, access and pricing, and to educate the public on safe practices when conducting financial transactio­ns using e-payment. The following month, Bank Negara in collaborat­ion with the National Cards Group (NCG) conducted merchant engagement sessions to enhance awareness and accelerate the adoption of PIN for payment card transactio­ns among merchants.

All these efforts are indeed commendabl­e but the current problem is the difficulty in using debit cards. Not many consumers are aware that there is a minimum amount they need to purchase before they can use debit cards. For some companies/ merchants, the minimum amount set is RM30; for others it is RM50. So what is this hype over e-payment all about when there are constraint­s and conditions that need to be met prior to using it? It also seems ridiculous and contrary to the cen- tral bank’s objective. The main contention is that there is no standard rule on minimum spending in order to cover the merchant’s service cost.

If one makes a comparison with Hong Kong where the Octopus card – an e-payment system similar to our Touch ‘N Go – is ubiquitous, there is no constraint on minimum spending. In Hong Kong, debit cards are not very popular as consumers either use their credit cards or the all-engaging and efficaciou­s Octopus card.

In neighbouri­ng Singapore, however, merchants do set a minimum amount of S$20. In Britain, the minimum of £5 spending rule in corner retail shops will be removed by 2020, and that was after much debate.

In order to realise the much-vaunted goal of being a cashless society, Bank Negara needs to tell the participat­ing merchants to get their act together. For one, it should instruct all participat­ing merchants to accept the debit cards with a more practical minimum amount of perhaps RM15. DR THANASEELE­N Kuala Lumpur

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia