Khaleej Times

Google’s beating plastic in India

- Andy Mukherjee

Google CEO Sundar Pichai can count the early success of Tez, the online payment system he custom-built for India, as a promising start to a gruelling fight.

The first click in online shopping is shifting away from search engines like Alphabet Inc’s Google to e-commerce behemoth Amazon.com. But Google isn’t bowing out. Even with more product searches beginning within the Amazon app, Pichai can always help provide the last mile in commerce — payment.

Asia is the perfect testing ground. Whether it’s splitting the cost of a meal, making a quick dash to the grocery store or ordering from a niche online boutique, the challenge in the region is often payment.

Customers and government­s want to ditch cash: In China, many people have switched to smartphone apps Alipay and WeChat Pay. In Indonesia, GoJek, the country’s biggest ridehailin­g service, is swallowing not one but three local fintech companies to make Go-Pay ubiquitous. Singapore, meanwhile, is adopting a national QR code.

In India, the conversati­on about digital payments began in earnest after the government outlawed 86 per cent of the currency in circulatio­n. That shock, in November 2016, was a boon for wallet firms like Paytm, but also became the launch point for a newly built mobile payment interface connecting most of the country’s banks.

Responding to an acute cash shortage, a panicky Indian government released its own payment app on the interface. But really, it’s Google’s Tez, unveiled in September, that’s showing the true potential of the shared platform.

It allows people to exchange money between accounts held at any bank using nothing but a virtual payments address. Mobile apps that use the technology handled 77 million transactio­ns in October, up from 31 million the previous month. Most of the growth is believed to be coming from Google’s push: Only 10 per cent of the business took place on Bhim, the government’s app, in October, down from 45 per cent in June.

Facebook Inc’s response is worth watching. A WhatsApp payments feature, expected to be rolled out soon, could be situated within the chat function, already used by 250 million Indians.

However, peer-to-peer payments won’t be enough. For both Pichai and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, signing up merchants in cities, towns and villages will be critical. Already half a million merchants are using the Tez app, a Google executive told the Economic Times, even though the National Payments Corporatio­n of India is still fine-tuning features to boost acceptance at points of sale.

Mobile transactio­ns have already surpassed commerce done via RuPay, the Indian version of Visa’s and Mastercard’s networks. But while RuPay handled $700 million at merchant establishm­ents in October, the Visa/Mastercard franchise, including both credit and debt cards, cleared $13 billion.

If Google and Facebook succeed in demolishin­g this lucrative source of banks’ revenue, they’ll land themselves a template. Outside of China, payments are an open contest in Asia, and plastic looks beat. — Bloomberg

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? The indian government’s demonetisa­tion experiment was a boon for wallet firms like paytm.
— Bloomberg The indian government’s demonetisa­tion experiment was a boon for wallet firms like paytm.

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