Digital payments to rise tenfold in three years
RBI committee recommends UPI expansion to meet target


UPI, which was started less than three years ago, has evolved into a mainstream payment option, with close to 800 million transactions this March, according to the National Payments Corporation of India. In March, the amount of money transacted rose by 25 percent, compared to February, to ₹1.3 lakh crore, a six-month record.
However, on a per-capita basis, Indians made 22 digital transactions in 2018-19, compared to Singapore’s 782 and China’s 97 in 2017. And unlike China, where Tencent Holdings’ WeChat dominates the market, in India there are a plethora of companies that offer similar options.
“The Indian payment ecosystem is transitioning. It is moving from an era of issuance to an era of acceptance,” the report said. In the last five years, the country has seen about 300 million people enter the banking network through the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana. There has also been a rise in digital credit into bank accounts due to the government’s direct-benefit transfers, and digitisation of government payments.
Despite banks in India issuing a cumulative of about 1 billion debit cards and 50 million credit cards to date, acceptance remains low, with only about 3.5 million point-of-sale devices, and 200,000 ATMs, the report adds. Transactions per device are also low. However, those through mobile phones have started growing, and now represent a significant proportion of total digital transactions.
“This growth will be driven by a shift from high-value, low-volume, high-cost transactions to low-value, high-volume, low-cost transactions,” the reports says.
First Published: Jun 20, 2019, 08:57
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