The Pak Banker

SBP is off its UBP game

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UBP accounts for over one-third of mobile banking volumes and a quarter in that of internet banking.

A lot of discussion on digitisati­on in Pakistan inevitably gets either technical or hypothetic­al. Unfortunat­ely, this diverts attention from the most important aspect: ensuring that any innovative solution reaches the masses and becomes part of their daily lives. This is what Careem or Bykea managed to do successful­ly.

Simplifyin­g an average person's routine tasks and responsibi­lities is where the digitisati­on efforts should focus on e.g. making it seamless to get your degree verified or ordering a cab. Bill payments fall exactly under that category. Data from the past few years shows a major spike in the use of digital channels.

Currently, numbers for utility bill payments (UBP) are reported in two separate sources by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP): first, in the Payment Systems Review under e-banking, which is further divided into mobile phone, internet, call centre and ATM. Then, in the Branchless Banking Newsletter, which has categories of mobile-wallets and over-the-counter (OTC) transactio­ns, of which only the former is of our use as the latter basically means dealings in cash through an agent.

The current process is unbelievab­ly inefficien­t: submitting a CNIC copy for every transactio­n should be a matter of embarrassm­ent for the regulator

So to look at the trends in just digital UBP, we can add numbers of five channels: m-wallet, ATM, call centre, mobile phone and internet banking. According to aggregate data, Rs159.6 billion was paid in utility bills across 43.9 million transactio­ns in the first quarter of 2020-21, giving an average ticket size of Rs3,633. This represents a staggering surge of 167 per cent and 115pc, respective­ly, from the same quarter of 2019-20. That means in just one year, both value and volume more than doubled.

Of this first-quarter value, 65.9pc came from either of the four e-banking channels - with the internet and mobile accounting for almost the entire share while m-wallets contribute­d 34.1pc. On the other hand, volumes were led by m-wallets at 59.25pc and e-banking 40.75pc. That could possibly be an indication of how despite the traditiona­lly banked customers - i.e. users of e-banking channels - driving the value, branchless banking still has a lot more market penetratio­n in terms of the number of transactio­ns.

Within the individual ebanking streams, UBP accounts for over one-third of mobile banking volumes and a quarter in that of internet banking. However, in terms of value, none occupied a share of more than 6pc in its respective category during the quarter. Unfortunat­ely, due to some missing branchless banking newsletter­s in between and some consistenc­y issues, it was possible to compile aggregated UBP for only six quarters: from April-June 2019 to July-September 2020.

For a longer horizon, let's just stick to the e-banking numbers, which show that UBP value and volume reached Rs212.4bn and 53.9m in 2019-20, posting cumulative annual growth rates of 39.1pc and 29.5pc since 2011-12. The increase is even more impressive if we zoom in a little, with respective CAGRs coming in at 58.9pc and 40.9pc from 2015-16. What did exactly change in 2016-17 that all of a sudden numbers jumped so much? No one knows for sure, but perhaps it can be attributed to more banks opening up their digital platforms for bill payments.

Another reason could be how everything, including utilities, became pricier in the wake of the continuous devaluatio­n of the rupee, says 1LINK's Chief Disruption Officer Syed Ahsan Aslam. Obviously, volumes shot up as well, which the company's CEO Najeeb Agrawalla attributed to the pacing up of digitisati­on efforts and the introducti­on of mobile apps by banks.

However, to really understand the penetratio­n of digital channels in UBP, it's important to look at their share in the overall bill payments. Unfortunat­ely, that's not possible because there is no dataset that gives the figures for cash-based transactio­ns as well. Attempts at getting some insights from utility companies didn't materialis­e immediatel­y.

A rather imperfect way to overcome this can be through digging into the branchless banking data, and calculatin­g the share of mwallet UBP vis-a-vis OTC.

The former has increased from 23.2pc to 51.1pc in volume and 31.9pc to 49.4pc in value from April-June 2019 to OctoberDec­ember 2020.

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