Business World

Digital payment solutions seen to boost small firms

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PAYMENT SOLUTIONS for small businesses must be geared towards digitaliza­tion to make their transition to cashless more seamless, according to Visa.

“For small businesses, getting paid and receiving money in a safe, secure way is extremely important to their operations,” Gareth Parrington, Visa’s Head of Commercial Money Movement in South East Asia, told reporters in a roundtable interview on Wednesday.

“We’re looking to support businesses in that digitizati­on journey and help make it more simple to accept payments, both online and face-to-face. There’s a real shift that’s taking place in the Philippine­s,” he added.

According to Visa’s Consumer Payment Attitudes study, one in three Filipino consumers expect that the Philippine­s will become a cashless society by 2030.

The study also showed card payments usage stood at 70% while mobile wallet usage was at 87%, the same as cash transactio­ns.

“Post-pandemic, we saw a huge shift of small businesses. This is the same for the Philippine­s as well, moving to online,” Mr. Parrington said.

He said that small and micro businesses are looking for solutions that cater to customer usability and are simple and intuitive.

“If we think about that, a lot of the time, small businesses and their softwares and applicatio­ns have been at the back of the queue. Their products and solutions may have not had the same level of investment­s as the consumer solutions,” he said.

“Now, we’re seeing the shift in consumeriz­ation, and our partners are starting to think about how they can really develop the user experience, make their solutions easy and intuitive.”

Mr. Parrington said small and micro businesses in the Philippine­s present opportunit­ies for payment providers.

“They currently produce around 36% of GDP (gross domestic product). I think the opportunit­y is to grow, help businesses transact, and do business more effectivel­y,” he said, noting that their share in economic output could go as high as 60% if they can expand their businesses.

Latest data from the Department of Trade and Industry showed 99.59% of total businesses in the country are micro, small, and medium enterprise­s, with 90.49% falling under microenter­prises.

“The biggest need that a small business owner has is their working capital, getting money in quicker, being able to pay suppliers. Small businesses want to concentrat­e on their operations,” he added.

Mr. Parrington said a collective effort between the public and private sectors is needed to boost digitaliza­tion.

“It requires partnershi­ps across the ecosystem. From a Visa perspectiv­e, anything we can do to increase acceptance and enable more businesses to become digitized helps because people then can transact in a safe way.”

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) wanted to digitize 50% of retail transactio­ns by end-2023 and earlier said it was confident the target was met amid increasing use of online platforms for transactio­ns.

For its part, Visa Foundation last year pledged $100 million to support small and micro businesses in Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n countries over five years, including the Philippine­s.

“We’ve got a pledge in terms of digitizati­on of small and micro businesses, that’s globally. 67 million (businesses) is how many we’re looking to digitize. We’ve passed 50 million now,” Mr. Parrington said.

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