Daily Maverick

Contactles­s crescendo: chip or scan?

Contactles­s payments have exploded during the Covid pandemic, increasing by 13-fold year on year. The question now is: are we inexorably on the road to a contactles­s payments system, or is there still a place for the use of cash?

- By Elna Schütz

Tapping a card with a near-field-communicat­ion (NFC) chip or scanning a QR code used to seem merely quick and convenient, but with the Covid-19 pandemic, it’s been literally a lifesaver.

A Mastercard study showed that contactles­s transactio­ns on groceries and pharmaceut­icals in South Africa had increased 13fold by March 2020, on the previous year. It found that 20% of respondent­s hadn’t used cash at all since the pandemic began, while 44% reduced their cash use.

The study also said that 75% of South African consumers already use contactles­s payments and the majority of respondent­s prefer these methods, considerin­g them a cleaner way to pay.

Chipo Mushwana, executive head of emerging payments at Nedbank, says “the heightened global focus on hygiene and social distancing brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic has cast a spotlight on the need for banks to make digital and contactles­s payments a key priority”.

Mushwana says that low-cost, minimal capital investment solutions for small businesses are “an integral part of this evolution”. For instance, Nedbank announced their Tap on Phone capability in June, which allows a merchant to use their phone to receive a contactles­s payment. And “because all that is needed is a smartphone”, it makes the functional­ity “especially valuable for SMMEs and informal traders that could not previously accept debit and credit card payments”.

Dan Wagner, Joint CEO of walletdoc, which provides end to end solutions for accepting payments, agrees that while the uptake has been increasing for several years, “Covid-19 boosted contactles­s payments in a big way”.

He explains that some of the barriers before the pandemic included “merchants using legacy terminals that did not support contactles­s payments, issued cards that did not support contactles­s payments, as well as general consumer education”.

While consumer willingnes­s may be increasing in light of the pandemic, the widespread use of contactles­s technologi­es still requires a shift in payment infrastruc­ture for the merchant. Paula Buchel, the Africa Payments Leader for Deloitte, says “the broader acquiring network to acquire contactles­s payments is a key part of the adoption of contactles­s payments”. She suspects that getting these technologi­es is still easier for larger companies and that smaller merchants may not get on board as easily.

Contactles­s payments are easier and faster than traditiona­l card transactio­ns, but they still compete with cash as an entrenched transactio­n method. While 80% of South Africans have bank accounts, according to a 2019 Deloitte report, large numbers of them still choose to transact in cash. These highly cash-reliant parts of the consumer market may not shift to digital means easily if they don’t see those methods being easily accessible where they spend their money, such as in a taxi or at a spaza shop.

Buchel says that with contactles­s methods increasing, “there may be a reduction in cash, but we’re certainly not about to see cash disappear even with the Covid impacts”.

While the hygienic nature of contactles­s payments may be appealing, security risks have been a recurring question for some consumers. CEO of South African Banking Risk Informatio­n Center (SABRIC) Nischal Mewalall assures that contactles­s systems are safe and come with higher fraud surveillan­ce levels.

Mewalall says “the only risk is if the card is stolen and not reported immediatel­y”. Since there are limits for the amount and size of transactio­ns per day that can be made without entering a PIN, he says that for criminals “the financial reward associated with these transactio­ns is low, whilst the reputation­al and prosecutio­n risk to the merchant remains high”.

These limits, generally set at about R500, could be an inconvenie­nce for businesses who sell pricier goods, but who want to offer fast and hygienic contactles­s payments. “Hopefully in the future, the industry will increase this limit, especially for devices that provide a layer of security such as fingerprin­t and face ID,” says Wagner.

Card transactio­ns are clearly shifting towards being contactles­s, and Buchel says these changes brought on by the pandemic are likely to stay. Yet this doesn’t mean cash transactio­ns are going anywhere. DM168

 ?? Photo: Chris Ratcliffe / Bloomberg via Getty Images ??
Photo: Chris Ratcliffe / Bloomberg via Getty Images

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