BusinessLine (Delhi)

Payments bank model flawed, prone to risk

With no mandate for lending, recovering the cost of deposits is a challenge. There is scope to park unaccounte­d wealth

- Ullas Rao The writer is Assistant Professor of Finance, EBS Dubai. Views are personal

The recent fallout of the Paytm crisis exposes some inherent flaws in India’s evolving fintech industry, which needs an urgent course correction for maintainin­g stability in the sector. Dichotomou­s as it may sound, while UPI has remained insulated from headwinds, Paytm as one of the main user platforms has found itself in troubled waters with a significan­t erosion in market value.

Unlike VISA, which also acts as a payment gateway, Paytm’s unusual and perhaps controvers­ial structure as “payment bank” exposes it to several governance risks not oblivious to convention­al banks.

As India achieves a rising economic stature, it is inevitable to see zealous individual­s and vested institutio­ns using a new route in payments bank as a novel way to allegedly launder money on the assumption of low risk attributab­le to less stringent regulatory oversight.

The combinatio­n of technology and governance holds the key in instilling confidence in India’s fledgling fintech sector.

As UPI continues to capture new markets including France, Mauritius, Sri

Lanka and the UAE, the world at large will be keenly monitoring the resilience of India’s payment infrastruc­ture with episodes like Paytm fiasco unlikely to boost confidence.

In an era where sanctions have become a norm, there has been a jostling of sorts in rolling out alternativ­e payment infrastruc­tures from the likes of UnionPay from China to UPI from India with a dual objective: first, to challenge dollar’s hegemony by pushing a payment system far and beyond domestic frontiers; and second, to subtly subvert internatio­nal coalition’s ability in the foreseeabl­e future to impose sanctions aimed at choking the domestic economy by cutting access to internatio­nal financial markets; largely dominated by the dollar.

EXOGENOUS SHOCKS

It doesn’t come as a surprise in the postsancti­ons era that both Iran and Russia, despite inevitable economic headwinds in the immediate aftermath of imposition of sanctions, have now gained a large degree of insulation from the exogenous shocks imposed by the West.

The complexity of internatio­nal payment infrastruc­ture gets further blurred as China is still viewed as a neutral actor with an active trade both

Popularise its usage further

with the West as well as its ideologica­l partners operating under the shadow of internatio­nal sanctions.

Even as UPI remains unscathed, the Paytm crisis should prompt policymake­rs to initiate necessary course correction­s.

First, the entire concept of payments bank initiated during the tenure of former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan needs to be revisited as it simply doesn’t provide sufficient rationale for payment providers to doubleup as banks by accepting deposits without the mandate for lending. The model is prone to significan­t risk in the absence of recovering the cost of deposit, skewing the balance sheet negatively.

As a consequenc­e, from an assetliabi­lity management (ALM) perspectiv­e, it is too risky a business model with significan­t scope for dubious players and vested interests to convenient­ly park unaccounte­d wealth as deposits. There is no internatio­nal precedent for payments bank, and much to the chagrin of the regulators, the model has simply failed to live up to its expectatio­ns.

It may not come as a shock if Paytm presents only the tip of the melting iceberg of payments banks, mandating an imminent forensic audit of all the players in the scene.

The internatio­nal competitor of Paytm, Paypal, continues to play its bread and butter role as a payment provider without engaging in any exotic banking product.

It would take some time before UPI can compete with the likes of VISA. In such a scenario, policymake­rs would do well to further popularise the usage of UPI within the domestic frontiers and rescind the concept of payments bank. India may well have emerged, but there is still some time before it has finally arrived. Until then, let’s set our own house in order.

 ?? ?? UPI.
UPI.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India