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Singapore and Thailand look at e-payment alliance

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SINGAPORE: Singapore and Thailand are in discussion­s about connecting their national digital payment systems to forge an unpreceden­ted regional alliance, as officials step up efforts to curb the use of cash.

The link would bring together South-East Asia’s first national digital-payment platforms, Singapore’s PayNow and Thailand’s PromptPay, said Naphongtha­wat Phothikit, director of payment systems policy at the Bank of Thailand.

“The Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Bank of Thailand are exploring the possibilit­y” of a link between the two networks, Naphongtha­wat said in an interview in Bangkok.

Discussion­s are at a preliminar­y stage, and it’s too early to talk about details or a timeline, he added.

The prospectiv­e tie-up is the latest effort by Asian nations to modernise the payment process. Government­s from India to Indonesia are prodding citizens to pay via cards, mobile devices and Internet-based channels, all of which are viewed as more efficient and traceable than physical notes and coins.

For now, cash remains the dominant mode of payment in much of the region. Some 57% of 4,000 consumers in seven Asian markets said they relied on notes and coins, a PayPal Holdings Inc survey shows. In contrast, digital transactio­ns are prevalent in much of Europe.

The Bank of Thailand oversaw the January roll out of the PromptPay service by the nation’s banks. It now has 24 million regis- trations via national identity cards, equivalent to about a third of the Thai population, Naphongtha­wat said.

PayNow, introduced by the city- state’s banking associatio­n in July, has over 500,000 registrati­ons, according to a Monetary Authority of Singapore release on Aug 29.

Both networks allow peer-to-peer transfers via banks and enable payments to be made using recipients’ mobile phone or national identity card numbers.

Thailand’s priority is to encourage the wider adoption of modes of payment such as credit cards and mobile-based wallets, Naphongtha­wat said in the late September interview.

Digital-based payment transactio­ns – including electronic fund transfers, e-wallets, credit cards and mobile and online banking –- have grown about 30% annually for the past five years, he added.

South-East Asia’s banks are girding for a competitiv­e onslaught amid aggressive expansion plans by China’s giant financial technology firms, such as Ant Financial, the payments affiliate of billionair­e Jack Ma’s Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

Thai banks had an incentive to bolster digital payments “to ensure they can compete with potential challenger­s from abroad, including the likes of Alipay and WeChat, which currently serve only Chinese tourists in Thailand,” Naphongtha­wat said.

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 ??  ?? Network tie-up: The Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Bank of Thailand are exploring the possibilit­y of a link between the two countries’ digital-payment platforms. — Reuters
Network tie-up: The Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Bank of Thailand are exploring the possibilit­y of a link between the two countries’ digital-payment platforms. — Reuters

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