Business Sphere

Government, RBI need to share cost of maintainin­g UPI infrastruc­ture

- By Our Correspond­ent

The government and the Reserve Bank of India need to share the cost with banks associated with maintainin­g UPI infrastruc­ture as it reduces the demand for cash and helps in curtailing expenditur­e on printing and managing currency notes, according to a report prepared by IIT-Bombay. Observing that about Rs 5,000 crore is spent annually on printing cash alone and even more on managing it, the report said, "The expenditur­e towards maintainin­g Unified Payment Interface (UPI) may be much lower and could even curtail the expenditur­e on cash."

The report further said UPI as a digital payments platform increases efficiency towards tax compliance, and provides overall convenienc­e for public good.

"With the government's vision of no direct or indirect charge on payments using UPI, an appropriat­e sharing of cost burden by the government and the RBI is called for (with UPI being the simplest alternativ­e to cash in this era of mobile phones)," the report added.

Currently, banks are bearing the cost of UPI transactio­ns. BHIM-UPI is powered by the National Payments Corporatio­n of India (NPCI) that engineered to make it a giant payment infrastruc­ture of the country. NPCI has not put any business restrictio­ns onto the banks for P2P (peer-to-peer) payments using BHIM-UPI other than years of moral suasion to keep the charges zero, it said.

In this context, it may be noted that in the approved minutes of a meeting of banks with NPCI dated February 14, 2020, the UPI Steering Committee of NPCI concurred to limit free P2P fund transfer transactio­ns to 20 per month, it said.

"However, we observe that NPCI does not explicitly indicate in the said minutes that the banks charge beyond 20 P2P transactio­ns in a month. Therefore, the decision to charge for UPI transactio­ns is that of banks and not of NPCI," it said.

While UPI is still in its infancy towards replacing cash, given its rapid progress and future potential, it deserves full support from the RBI, it said.

It further said while banks have to contribute their bit for the payment system, it does not mean that the government and the RBI do not have to share the cost burden in endeavour towards furthering the digital payment system of the country.

"With the new law prohibitin­g banks and system providers to charge users of the prescribed electronic modes of payment, we find a persistent debate on MDR (merchant discount rate), a fee that merchants pay for accepting payments through digital means," it said.

Though it is a fact that card-based merchant payments has worked well internatio­nally on the principle of MDR, there is a need to be a bit careful to apply the same principle for the asset-lite UPI, which has the potential to substitute our day-to-day cash requiremen­ts, it said. For the present, without advocating anything on the MDR front for UPI, it may at most have a relook at the MDR issue surroundin­g debit cards.

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R.B.I

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