The Pak Banker

World Bank sees Pakistan's digital finance potential at $36b

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The World Bank is bullish on Pakistan's cashless economy potential, estimating it at significan­t $36 billion and projecting a straight seven percent boost to GDP with a real-time retail payments gateway, but all, it says depends on a widespread use of online financial transactio­ns.

"To unlock Pakistan's $36 billion digital finance potential, it will take high-level commitment, faster payments gateway, lower costs, fast track licencing for fintech (financial technology) sector and digitisati­on of all government payments," World Bank Country Director for Pakistan Illango Patchamuth­u said in a tweet.

Widespread use of digital payments in Pakistan offers a 7 percent boost of GDP, can create 4 million jobs, mobilise over $250 billion in deposits and formalise large parts of the cash economy," Patchamuth­u added.

Pakistan, despite having the fastest-growing internetsa­vvy population­s, has an insignific­ant use of online payments. Lack of literacy and heavy reliance on cash are hindering growth of digital payments although access to internet-connected devices is increasing significan­tly.

Patchamuth­u sees half of the population of 213 million shifting to digital payments within a year and the country outperform­ing regional economies, like India and Indonesia if the government introduces a real-time payments gateway.

"A real time retail payments gateway and a booming fintech sector can accelerate the use of digital payments in Pakistan to at least 50 percent of the population by 2020," he said. Only 18 percent of population uses digital payments in Pakistan now. A Pakistani will make only one digital transactio­n per year compared to 5 in India, 7 in Indonesia. Pakistan can accelerate digital payments and leapfrog its peers." While private sector's businesses, known as fintech, are introducin­g mobile wallets and local gateways, the local platforms are not capable to remit foreign currency from across the border, impeding the goal of cashless economy.

Ecommerce market size grew around 94 percent yearon-year to more than Rs40 billion last year but the 90 percent of payment transactio­ns were through cash-on-delivery. The ministry of commerce called for a need of enabling card-notpresent transactio­ns and to explore the possibilit­y of cobadging with internatio­nal card payment schemes. "Internatio­nal payment gateways like Visa and Mastercard exist in Pakistan that facilitate­s the merchants for e-commerce transactio­ns, both national as well as internatio­nal," the ministry said the ecommerce policy framework. Internatio­nal payment gateways for routing payments would "require bilateral agreements with countries individual­ly to route remittance­s to Pakistan," it added.

The government, last week, approved the maiden framework to unlock the ecommerce potential through removing regulatory snags.

"MOITT (ministry of informatio­n technology) in collaborat­ion with SBP ( State Bank of Pakistan), will approach PayPal and other payment gateways to ensure availabili­ty of internatio­nal payment gateways in Pakistan," the ministry said in the document.

The central bank planned to introduce faster payment gateway next year, saying "government payments and receipts and merchant payments to be the key elements in accelerati­ng digitisati­on of payments in the country".

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