Gulf Times

Freelancer­s upset over PayPal refusal to service Pakistan

-

Pakistan’s freelancer community, which is said to be the fourth largest in the world, has expressed disappoint­ment over reports of PayPal not extending its services to the country.

PayPal operates a worldwide online payment system that supports online money transfers refused to introduce its services in the country.

The company operates in 190 markets across the world.

There has been a repeated demand from freelancer­s and e-commerce players to bring PayPal to Pakistan.

Former finance minister Asad Umar had also shown commitment to facilitati­ng its arrival.

The effort has, however, been in vain.

On Thursday, a Senate committee was informed that the US company would not come to Pakistan.

“PayPal did not decline because it has issues operating in Pakistan, [but] their internal working is such that they are not ready to introduce services in Pakistan,” Informatio­n Technology Secretary Maroof Afzal had told the Senate standing committee on IT.

If PayPal comes to Pakistan, it will facilitate around 200,000 freelancer­s and over 7,000 registered small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs).

Besides, there are also thousands of e-commerce contributo­rs who are not registered.

“PayPal is the de facto payment mechanism abroad. What has happened in the absence of PayPal or an internatio­nally-recognised payment gateway is that freelancer­s and SMEs have hacked other ways of doing services and getting money from abroad,” said P@ASHA (Pakistan Software Houses Associatio­n for IT and ITES) secretary general Shehryar Hydri said.

ITES stands for IT Enabled Service.

Explaining how these hacks work, Hydri said that the SMEs had accounts opened abroad through their relatives or someone they know and receive payments there.

“From the government’s point of view, this is a major leakage in the system when people are forced to keep their money abroad,” he added.

About PayPal’s reservatio­ns over extending its services to Pakistan, Hydri regretted that a major drawback was that the point-of-sale system (POS) had not really taken off.

“Internatio­nal companies such as PayPal look into transactio­n numbers and bank accounts when considerin­g joining a market. In Pakistan, POS and credit cards penetratio­n is not healthy,” he said.

According to the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), the total number of credit cards currently stands at 3.6mn, whereas the share of debit cards is

52.4% with 21mn cards issued by commercial banks.

By the end of 2017, the number of bank accounts had reached 49mn.

“[To be able to move forward, we need] an internatio­nally-recognised payment gateway like Alipay and a home-grown payment mechanism that benefits the economy domestical­ly,” suggested Hyderi.

Given PayPal’s demand due to the company’s easy-to-use mechanism, trust across the board and fraud prevention, the freelancer community, which is currently using nonbanking (informal) channels to receive payments, is faced with a host of issues.

“The dollar rate for payments at banks is very different from the open market. If the exchange rate is Rs148 to the dollar, we get the payment at Rs141,” said Faiza Yousaf, cofounder of start-up GeneTech Solutions in Karachi.

Yousaf, who relies on internatio­nal payments for financial operations of her startup, said that relying on bank transfer and local channels meant waiting for days to receive payment.

“With PayPal, one can send the invoice directly to customer or through easy integratio­n on the website within two minutes,” she said.

Besides reductions and delays in payments, the choice of clients available to work with local start-ups and freelancer­s is also limited.

“On Upwork (a global freelancin­g platform), most clients refuse to work because they only trust PayPal for transactio­ns,” she added.

In August 2018, according to the SBP, Pakistan’s IT export crossed $1bn mark for the first time in history.

The Pakistan Tehreek-eInsaf (PTI) government has chalked out plans to boost IT exports to over $6bn by 2020 and $10bn by 2025, and has also emphasised on the digitisati­on of the economy and the IT sector.

It has formed a special task force on IT, comprising big names of the industry, to create jobs and facilitate exports.

However, the e-commerce community believes that the government is not doing enough to facilitate the IT industry.

“PayPal never agreed to come to Pakistan in the first place. Pakistan’s market size is not good enough for the American company, and even the credit card penetratio­n is less than 3mn,” said the National Incubation Centre (Karachi) director Shahjahan Chaudhry.

“We need to work on our value propositio­n to convince such companies to come to Pakistan. We are not answering what they need,” he said.

 ??  ?? Right now PayPal does not accept businesses in Pakistan.
Right now PayPal does not accept businesses in Pakistan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar