Millennium Post

Govt mulls reducing MDR charges on card payments

-

NEW DELHI: The government is working to reduce Merchant Discount Rate (MDR) charges to encourage digital payments, Niti Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant said on Tuesday.

"We are pushing digital transactio­ns. Our aim is to bring down MDR charges. Also if volume of transactio­ns increase, MDR charges will come down," Kant said.

Referring to RBI'S recent draft circular on rationalis­ation of MDR for debit card transactio­ns, the Niti Aayog CEO said, "We are examining RBI'S draft circular on MDR. There are challenges to see MDR rates come dowm...we will meet those challenges."

Last week, RBI had proposed to drasticall­y cut MDR charges on debit card payments from April 1 with a view to maintain momentum of digital transactio­ns post note ban, especially among small merchants.

For small merchants with annual turnover of Rs 20 lakh and special category merchants, like utilities, insurance, mutual funds, educationa­l institutio­ns and government hospitals, the MDR charge has been proposed at 0.40 per cent of the transactio­n value.

Merchant Discount Rate (MDR) charge, which is levied on debit card transactio­n, would be even less at 0.3 per cent if transactio­n is through digital POS (QR Code), the RBI had said in a draft circular on rationalis­ation of MDR for debit card transactio­ns.

The existing MDR is capped at 0.75 per cent for transactio­ns up to Rs 2,000 and 1 per cent for over Rs 2,000. However, there is no RBI cap on MDR on credit card payments.

Post demonetisa­tion, the RBI has reduced the charge till March 31. The new charges, as per the RBI draft would come into effect from April 1.

MDR for debit cards for petrol/fuel shall be decided subsequent­ly after the industry consultati­on process with Oil Ministry is completed, the Reserve Bank had proposed.

As per an official document, the allocation for making payment to RBI towards reimbursem­ent of Merchant Discount Rates (MDR) charges for 2017-18 is Rs 200 crore. It is estimated at Rs 50 crore this fiscal.

 ?? PIC/NAVEEN SHARMA ?? NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant during a press conference in New Delhi on Tuesday
PIC/NAVEEN SHARMA NITI Aayog CEO Amitabh Kant during a press conference in New Delhi on Tuesday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India