HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceViewpoint | Credit access to debit card holders, a potential game-changer for consumer spending  

Viewpoint | Credit access to debit card holders, a potential game-changer for consumer spending  

This large untapped segment of potential borrowers has led banks and financial institutions to look for solutions to leverage the debit card penetration in the country.

July 18, 2019 / 09:07 IST
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Arvind Ronta

 The government’s consistent push for financial inclusion and more digital payments has aided the cashless agenda in India. Debit cards have become a much preferred cashless payment method for a large chunk of people. Over the last four years, the number of debit cards has more than doubled and is expected to cross one billion in the near future. In fact, the low credit card penetration, characteristic of the Indian market, is further dwarfed by the sheer size of debit cards in the country. Does that mean that Indian consumers do not have an appetite for credit? Certainly not.

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Current consumer credit scenario

India has an increasingly aspirational and young population. In the last five years, retail loans have grown at a compounded annual rate of 16 per cent, buttressed by an expanding and ambitious middle class. The value of credit card transactions at point-of-sale (POS) terminals exceeds that of debit cards, especially as big-ticket purchases happen through EMIs (Equated Monthly Instalments). The need for credit exists, but awareness is low and access to formal borrowing in India remains drastically below that of high-income economies as well as the global average. In 2017, only 10 per cent of Indians accessed formal borrowing as compared to nearly 90 per cent in developed economies.