Manila Bulletin

BAP assures ATM rates will stay reasonable

- By LEE C. CHIPONGIAN

While the central bank is reviewing each banks’ applicatio­n for ATM (automated teller machine) rate adjustment­s, the Bankers Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (BAP) has dispelled public concerns that transactio­n costs will become steeper.

In a statement Monday, the BAP said ATM fees will continue to be fair and sensible and that the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) will “ensure that the costs are reasonable and beneficial to the banking public.”

“We would like to assure the banking public of our commitment to serving them,” said BAP Managing Director Benjamin P. Castillo. “We will collaborat­e with the regulators to ensure that ATM fees remain market-driven and reasonable, while continuing to provide convenienc­e and security to the banking public.”

BSP Governor Benjamin E. Diokno earlier also assured the public that the lifting of the sixyear ban on ATM fee increase does not imply an automatic adjustment, that the BSP would have to review each proposals submitted by banks.

In the meantime the BAP said the six-year moratorium on ATM transactio­n fees has “held back banks optimal performanc­e in servicing and expanding their reach.”

“The number of cardholder­s has been increasing for the past six years. Banks need to keep up with the maintenanc­e and innovation of ATMs, as well as expansion of ATM network to accommodat­e the surge of ATM usage,” said Castillo.

He said the annual ATM deployment­s was growing at an average rate of 13 percent before the moratorium was implemente­d in 2013.

Since the moratorium, ATM growth has dropped to just 6.4 percent per year, on average. ATM transactio­n volume however increased from 2014 up to the present, said BAP. Banks’ expenses also expanded since 2014 from operationa­l activities such as loading, servicing, complaints handling, reconcilia­tion, software, capacity expansion and security, it added.

According to data shared by the BAP, ATM density in the country is low compared with ASEAN peers.

It estimated that with just 21,000 ATMs in operation servicing 58 million ATM cardholder­s, the ratio is 20 ATMs per capita of 100,000 cardholder­s. Other countries in the region have higher ratios. Thailand has 94 ATMs per 100,000 cardholder­s, while Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia have 49, 45 and 40, respective­ly.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines