Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

National Payment Platform ball now in the CB court

- By Bandulla Sirimanna

The much-debated National Payment Platform (NPP) project suspended in August 2017 will be further reviewed before it gets off the ground under the watchful eye of the Central Bank (CB), official sources said.

The CB, now coming under the Finance Ministry on a directive of the President, will supervise and monitor the entire process of developing and implementi­ng of the NPP to facilitate digital payments with the working of the core platform, the payment gateways of banks, and digital payment applicatio­ns, a top official involved in this NPP task told the Business Times.

In 2015, the then Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke allocated a sum of Rs.25 bullion from the national budget for the NPP.

This NPP is to be devised by integratin­g traditiona­l and nontraditi­onal payment and settlement systems while separating business messaging from financial messaging.

The NPP will be within the regulation­s of the Payment and Settlement Systems Act No 28 of 2005 and in line with the requiremen­ts of the Central Bank (CB), State Minister of National Policies and Economic Affairs, Dr. Harsha de Silva told the Business Times adding that the ball is now in the CB court.

Financial messaging will be the scope of the CB while business messaging will be the scope of various other innovative entreprene­urs’ ventures, he said adding that marrying traditiona­l and non-traditiona­l systems will not be an easy task, but progress has been made in identifyin­g a couple of alternativ­es.

He noted that he took the initiative to bring the NPP within the regulation­s of the Payment and Settlement Systems Act No 28 of 2005 and in line with the requiremen­ts of the Central Bank (CB),

The validity of the approval given by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Management (CCEM) and the subsequent endorsemen­t of the cabinet to set up a hybrid company as a separate entity of the NPP to facilitate ‘single button transactio­ns’ is now in doubt due to the President’s directive to abolish the CCEM.

Meanwhile issuing media release, the CB rejected claims Minister de Silva had "summoned the Monetary Board to his Ministry and asked the Board to implement ICTA's shoddy payment gateway".

The CB said the State Minister convened a meeting of stakeholde­rs to resolve a longstandi­ng issue regarding the way forward on a NPP and two independen­t members of the Monetary Board had expressed an interest in participat­ing in the meeting to assist in finding a solution to a long outstandin­g issue.

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