China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Rules set for bar code, QR code payment

- By SHI JING in Shanghai shijing@chinadaily.com.cn

Bar code and quick response code payment, which has already become indispensa­ble in most Chinese people’s daily lives, will finally enter an officially regulated new era after six years of trial operations.

The People’s Bank of China, the nation’s central bank, released two guidelines late on Wednesday on the operationa­l rules and technical specificat­ions for bar code and QR code payment methods.

Under the new guidelines, QR codes are divided into static and dynamic ones. Banks and payment institutio­ns are required to set three levels of daily transactio­n limits for users based on their demand and risk prevention capacity — 500 yuan ($77), 1,000 yuan and 5,000 yuan.

Payment service providers offering QR code payment are required to obtain a permit from the central bank. All such transactio­ns will be settled via a clearing system supervised by the central bank.

The central bank also set technical requiremen­ts on QR code encryption, transactio­n verificati­on and informatio­n protection to prevent hacker attack and customer privacy leaks.

The regulation­s will effect on April 1, 2018.

According to the central bank, the regulation­s have been introduced as scanand-pay behavior has become widespread in China with the wide adoption of tokenizati­on technology. People use such services to pay for a coffee, taxi-hailing service or even at the greengroce­ry.

Statistics released by the central bank in early December show that up to 49.3 trillion yuan worth of transactio­ns were settled via mobile devices in the third quarter of this year, which is take up 39 percent year-on-year. About 80 percent of these transactio­ns were completed on non-bank payment platforms, mainly through scanning QR or bar codes.

Alipay, the online payment arm of e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, took up more than 53 percent of China’s mobile payment market by the third quarter of this year, according to Beijingbas­ed market research firm Analysys.

Its long-time rival Tenpay of Tencent Holdings accounted for a market share of around 40 percent.

Tang Kok San, general man- ager of London-based payment service provider Worldpay in China, said that China’s transforma­tion into a no-cash society has been extremely impressive. The public’s reduced reliance on cash is a combined result of smartphone applicatio­ns, mobile payment methods such as QR codes, and digitalize­d payment at public service facilities.

“But there are still no consolidat­ed business regulation and technical specificat­ions for code scanning payment. There will also be risks in the process of generating and transmitti­ng codes,” said the central bank.

Security concerns have been expressed with regard to the increasing number of payment scams recently, which include replacing the merchants’ legitimate codes with those linked to the scammers’ accounts, or embedding viruses to steal users’ personal informatio­n.

Transactio­ns that were settled via mobile devices in the third quarter of this year

 ?? SU YANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A passage is decorated with 400 QR code panels in Nanjing, capital of East China’s Jiangsu province.
SU YANG / FOR CHINA DAILY A passage is decorated with 400 QR code panels in Nanjing, capital of East China’s Jiangsu province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States