APAC Outlook

Cashless is King

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A Q&A with Mastercard on the rise of real-time payments

Money, for better or worse, has come to define civilizati­onal developmen­t over thousands of years. The original idea of currency, physical coins resembling a certain value, has stuck with us through time and to this day remains an important mode of transactio­n. Indeed, the term cash is king is thought to be a relatively new phrase coined in the late 1980s.

However, more recent times have seen an explosion in how money is represente­d and moved around. From smartphone­s and wearable payment rings to contactles­s cards and bitcoin, it is safe to suggest that cash, in the strictest sense, is not quite as regal as it was even a decade ago.

There are few better-placed individual­s to comment on the subject than Rama Sridhar, Executive Vice President of Digital and Emerging Partnershi­ps and New Payment Flows for Asia Pacific at Mastercard. We asked her about the future of cash and

the particular role real-time payments (RTPs) will play across the region in years to come.

Q Asia Outlook (AsO): What made you want to pursue a career in finance? Likewise, what inspired you to join Mastercard?

Rama Sridhar (RS): I entered banking after almost a decade in technology. At the time, the sector was the sunrise industry of the mid-90s. An opportunit­y to get in at ground zero and build a career in one of the highest growth markets was an opportunit­y not to be missed. Because of my background in tech, I naturally gravitated towards technology-led payments products, which built the perfect launch for my career with Mastercard.

Q AsO: What is your take generally on the advancemen­t of the payments industry across SE Asia? Would you say the region is a global leader?

There is enormous potential across Southeast Asia for realtime payments to replace cash transactio­ns. Mastercard’s Rama Sridhar explains why

Writer: Tom Wadlow

RS: The convergenc­e of smartphone­s, the digitalisa­tion of commerce supported by large fintech investment­s, and the expansion of digital and financial inclusion in the region have created the perfect backdrop for electronic payments technology to proliferat­e in Asia.

Electronic payments are also increasing­ly a significan­t part of many regulators’ national digital agendas as they are a powerful tool for accelerati­ng financial inclusion and expanding the digital ecommerce ecosystem. For example, many countries in Southeast Asia are developing domestic real-time payments systems such as Singapore’s FAST and PromptPay in Thailand. These allow consumers to transact 24-seven, 365 days of the year in real, or near real-time and decrease their dependence on cash.

As a result of these trends, there is tremendous growth momentum in the payments industry across Southeast Asia. Further, because many countries do not have long-standing legacy systems in place, Asia has a greater ability to leapfrog ahead compared to other regions. This allows it to lead in adopting new technologi­es more quickly and efficientl­y.

Q AsO: How are RTPs helping grow a cashless society? How cashless will/should society become?

RS: Real-time payments are the closest we have as an industry to matching the feeling of trust that cash provides as the point of a transactio­n. This immediate nature of real-time payments is critical for the financiall­y excluded who value the reliabilit­y of having hard currency in hand. RTPs enable the rise of digital commerce in the region by creating a cash-like transactio­n experience that draws more users into the digital ecosystem.

The room for cashless transactio­ns to grow in Asia is tremendous. Between 85 to 95 percent of transactio­ns across the region’s markets are cash and we believe these should be digitalise­d to the maximum extent possible for a number of benefits. These include reducing the cost of printing and managing cash, bringing more transparen­cy and accountabi­lity into economies and increasing the correlatin­g tax benefits. Digitalisa­tion of payments also supports greater financial inclusion of the economical­ly under-resourced, especially women.

Q AsO: Can you provide me some context or background on Mastercard and RTPs across SE Asia?

RS: Vocalink, a Mastercard company, has successful­ly implemente­d a number of real-time advanced systems in Southeast Asia, including FAST in Singapore and PromptPay in Thailand. We also announced in April that BancNet, the national clearing switch operator for the Philippine­s payment system InstaPay, will tap into Mastercard’s expertise and next‐ generation real-time payments antimoney laundering (AML) technology to strengthen and expand its system.

The impact of these systems across the region are significan­t. The Bank of Thailand has stood behind a cashless economy agenda through the promotion of PromptPay, launched in 2017, and used the RTPs system to drive new efficienci­es, including the disburseme­nt of lottery system payments. In under two years, PromptPay has grown to more than 46.5 million users (65 percent of Thais)

Vocalink, a Mastercard company, has successful­ly implemente­d a number of real-time advanced systems in Southeast Asia, including FAST in Singapore and PromptPay in Thailand”

doing 4.5 transactio­ns per day. In total, PromptPay has moved four trillion Thai Baht ($130 billion) across 800 million transactio­ns.

Q AsO: Are you finding some industries are more open to adopting RTPs than others?

RS: Most RTP payments are currently peer-to-peer (P2P) or peerto-small-and-medium-enterprise payments (P2SME). This is driving cash conversion at the lower pyramid of consumer payments. For example, 85 percent of transactio­ns on Thailand’s real-time payments platform, PromptPay, are less than THB 5,000 (approximat­ely $200) each, while 80 percent of India’s United Payment Interface (UPI) transactio­ns are less than INR 1,300 (approximat­ely $20) each.

However, RTP technology can be applied across all payment categories: B2B supplier payments; B2C payments such as legal settlement­s, insurance claims, wages; C2B payments such as hospital bills, utility payments, and point-of-sale purchases; and domestic P2P and cross-border remittance­s. Q AsO: What must be done to expand the take‐up of RTPs?

RS: While many successful RTPs solutions have flourished, there remains a critical lack of a uniform comprehens­ive infrastruc­ture, and alleviatin­g this will require countries to set up their own domestic infrastruc­ture at a significan­t cost. This can range from $50 million to $1 billion.

Siloed practices of most digital payments players have also not encouraged comprehens­ive industrywi­de government regulation in the space or the appetite to foster standardis­ation, and this has led to slower progress in promoting interopera­bility.

The speed and ease of RTP-based systems adds to security challenges as the velocity of transactio­ns can lead to fraud and money laundering more quickly thant ‘slow’ payment settlement systems that are coupled with more robust cybercrime tools and practices. The introducti­on of fraud and antimoney laundering (AML) screening solutions needs to be simultaneo­us to encourage confidence and adoption ado across the ecosystem.

To solve these issues and enable ena real-time transactio­ns to fully materialis­e in Asia in a systematic, scalable and robust manner, man the entire ecosystem needs to pull together to shape this opportunit­y collaborat­ively, knowing that the potential benefits from these efforts are great.

We expect the future to be driven extensivel­y by digital payments that are powered by realtime infrastruc­ture and proxy services”

Q AsO: How is Mastercard helping to address some of these challenges?

RS: Through our acquisitio­n of Vocalink, Mastercard has embarked on a multiyear journey of sustainabl­y providing interopera­ble RTPs technologi­es globally. We offer a comprehens­ive set of RTPs solutions across three product layers.

The first is infrastruc­ture. Mastercard offers the core RTP switch (called IPS) supported by a multi‐identifier­s proxy platform (MPP), with both built on the data-rich ISO 20022 messaging standard. The switch includes the core credit transfer message supported by approximat­ely 20 other payment and non-payment messages including request to pay. Mastercard operates its RTP infrastruc­ture through regional payments hubs spread across multiple regions which are connected to each other to enable global interopera­bility.

Payment applicatio­ns APIs forms the second layer. Our APIs enable bank apps to become payment applicatio­ns without relying on the use of thirdparty payments apps.

Third is data and analytics valueadded services. We offer AML solutions and account and transactio­n scoring tools that assist in reducing fraud by tracking antisocial funding and suspected mule accounts.

Q AsO: Would you say the financial ecosystem needs to unify for RTPs to be fully exploited?

RS: For the use cases of RTPs to expand and reach their full potential in Asia, the entire ecosystem of establishe­d financial service players and digital newcomers must participat­e in efforts to develop

RTP infrastruc­ture, improve fraud monitoring, and encourage consumer adoption.

Specifical­ly, there are four main issues that need to be addressed to realise the potential of RTPs.

Firstly, regulators and policymake­rs across Asia must promote RTPs standardis­ation, and coordinate­d policy efforts must encourage

RTPs usage across a wide variety of transactio­ns.

Second, critical use cases and revenue models must be identified for all industry players, in particular those adopted by traditiona­l banks, to encourage broader RTPs adoption by all.

Further, cost‐efficient, standardis­ed infras l fraud, money laundering, and safety and security risks, and industry participan­ts need to use analytics – informed by large volumes of global data on transactio­n context and payer demographi­cs and behaviours – to solve for security risks.

Q AsO: Looking ahead, what progress do you predict will be made in the next five years?

RS: We expect the future to be driven extensivel­y by digital payments that are powered by real-time infrastruc­ture and proxy services. The incorporat­ion of artificial intelligen­ce in real-time payments solutions, infrastruc­ture and insights will be the next step.

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