Business Standard

India is world leader in real-time payments

- SUBRATA PANDA Mumbai, 7 October

India has emerged as the global leader in real-time payments, handling 41 million transactio­ns per day, according to a report by FIS Global. The real-time activity, the report said, has further improved in the country, with volumes jumping more than twice this year and the transactio­n value increasing 80 per cent. Industry experts had earlier opined that the Covid pandemic accelerate­d the usage of real-time payment methods in the country.

India has emerged as the global leader in real-time payments, handling 41 million transactio­ns per day, according to a report by FIS Global. The real-time activity, the report said, has further improved in the country, with volumes jumping more than twice this year and the transactio­n value increasing 80 per cent.

Industry experts had earlier opined that the Covid pandemic accelerate­d the usage of real-time payment methods in the country. “India continues to innovate with the launch of extensive business services on real-time rails, including IPO subscripti­on, mandate management, and invoice-inthe-box,” the report said.

India saw growth of around

213 per cent in the number of real-time payments processed over the past year; Bahrain, Ghana, the Philippine­s, and Australia witnessed faster growth in the same period. Furthermor­e, in terms of the increase in the monetary value of real-time payment transactio­ns, the Philippine­s, Bahrain, Australia, and Ghana saw twofold increase.

China and South Korea, with more than 38 million and 12 million daily transactio­ns per day, respective­ly, completed the top three in the AsiaPacifi­c region, along with India.

“The current pandemic has highlighte­d the critical importance of instantly getting funds in the hands of those who need it, whether individual­s or businesses,” said Raja Gopalakris­hnan, head of Global Real-time Payments, FIS.

The Immediate Payment System (IMPS), and Unified Payment Interface (UPI) have revolution­ised real-time payment in India. Now UPI, in volume terms, is touching new highs every month and the pandemic has the accelerate­d the adoption of digital payments hugely.

While the National Payments Corporatio­n of India (NPCI) has been successful in democratis­ing digital payments over the past few years, especially with the launch of UPI, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has now invited private players to form a panIndian new umbrella entity (NUE) for retail payment systems. Many banks, including the country’s largest lender State Bank of India, are likely interested to bid for it. Speaking with FIS Global, Challa Sreenivasu­lu Setty, MD, SBI, said the RBI’S idea of inviting private players to set up a pan-indian NUE for retail payment systems is primarily to ensure there are checks and balances to prevent monopoly and any concentrat­ion of risk in the hands of a single player.

A P Hota — former CGM, RBI and former MD & CEO, NPCI — was quoted as saying by FIS Global that because of high-transactin­g segments like retail real-time payments, bill payments, toll payments, bulk and repetitive payments are already under the NPCI, but there are concerns about financial viability unless the RBI advises all large banks to join NUE to minimise concentrat­ion risk.

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