Business Standard

Payments companies recommend a KYC bureau to RBI panel

PCI meets Nilekani committee, asks for a smoother access to transactio­n infrastruc­ture

- NEHA ALAWADHI & KARAN CHOUDHURY

The Indian payments industry on Friday recommende­d a Know Your Customer (KYC) bureau to the Nandan Nilekani-led Reserve Bank of India (RBI) committee on digital payments. This would iron out issues faced by the industry since the Supreme Court judgment on September 26, 2018, disallowed private companies from asking Aadhaar data of their customers for the KYC process.

The Payments Council of India (PCI), the payments and settlement arm of industry body Internet and Mobile Associatio­n of India, also said there should be a regulatory regime to ensure equality between cash and noncash transactio­ns. Some of the other recommenda­tions were: There should be seamless access to payments and settlement­s infrastruc­ture, promotion of economic viability through tax incentives and exemptions, a shot in the arm for competitio­n, safeguard for transactio­ns, and a level playing field for new entrants.

The committee was formed on January 8, and will submit its report within 90 days. Its mandate is to recommend how to “deepen” digital payments, with the aim of enhancing financial inclusion through digitisati­on.

On Thursday, during the press conference after the monetary policy review, RBI Governor Shaktikant­a Das said the central bank was considerin­g the feasibilit­y of regulating digital payments, and it would soon publish draft guidelines for consultati­ons.

Naveen Surya, chairman emeritus, PCI, met with the committee in Mumbai on Friday. Later, he said, “Currently, monthly retail digital payments are about $275 billion. We want it to be $500 billion in the next two years. The country is on the verge of becoming a digital superpower.”

He added that cash was still the primary mode of transactio­n. “To digitise, we need to build a robust ecosystem and enhance customer confidence.”

The PCI also told the panel that payments below ~50,000, especially on prepaid instrument­s (PPI) such as Paytm, Mobikwik, and ItzCash should happen seamlessly and with minimum KYC verificati­on.

At present, PPIs are only allowed partial direct access to payments infrastruc­ture, through card networks and the Unified Payments Interface. The PCI has recommends seamless access.

It has also asked for interopera­bility among

PPIs, currently only allowed for merchants and remittance­s at the domestic level. This should be allowed to foreign merchants and foreign inward remittance­s, it has recommende­d.

“Credit cards are a critical instrument for growth of digital payments in India. Approximat­ely, 40 million credit cards have been issued so far. The credit bureau has records of 400 million consumers. So there is clearly a huge untapped market,” said the PCI. “So, we are betting big in the framework to issue credit cards by non-banking finance companies to be a catalyst for growth of digital payments across the economy.”

The PCI also recommende­d that customers should be allowed to choose their level of KYC, depending on the frequency of their transactio­ns and convenienc­e. It also suggested appointing a full-time independen­t payments expert on the board of the payments and settlement­s system.

PPIs are only allowed partial direct access to payments infrastruc­ture, through card networks and the Unified Payments Interface. The PCI has recommends seamless access

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India