HomeNewsOpinionIndia’s banks are making $64 billion from free, cashless payments

India’s banks are making $64 billion from free, cashless payments

The UPI online payment system that is familiar, fast, and free has clearly only scratched the surface of its potential. For India’s initially reluctant banks that have turned a giveaway into a catalyst for last year’s 38% revenue growth, it makes sense to not upset the status quo

October 06, 2023 / 11:37 IST
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India’s banks have turned a giveaway into a catalyst for last year’s 38% revenue growth, it makes sense to not upset the status quo. (Source: Bloomberg)

On more than 6 billion separate occasions in just one month, the ringing of cash registers in India was replaced by audio confirmations on a digital sound box. Add instances of people paying one another rather than merchants, and the world’s most-populous nation drummed up more than 10 billion cashless transactions in August. All were online, instantaneous… and cost nothing.

At least most of them didn’t. Since April, customers dipping into their mobile-phone wallets to settle bills of more than 2,000 rupees ($24) may have to bear a part of a 1.1 percent fee, but only if they are scanning a different platform’s quick-response code. This charge goes from the merchant to his QR code provider — Walmart Inc-owned PhonePe or homegrown Paytm — for hooking up with Alphabet Inc’s Google Pay. But the Unified Payments Interface, a common protocol for people to send and receive money into accounts at different banks, remains free for regular use.

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Banks do try to impose some costs on high-volume users, and the government gives them money to promote low-value online transactions and make formal credit available to disadvantaged groups like street vendors. Yet, a lot of the lenders complain about being made to watch the swelling wave of online payments from the sidelines, rather than being allowed to ride it. Without a profit motive, how will India sustain an industry that — starting from nowhere seven years ago — has come to transact nearly $2 trillion of value annually?

It appears that those concerns are overblown. Even with a free public utility, India’s payment revenue swelled last year to $64 billion, behind only China, the US and Brazil, and rivalling Japan, according to McKinsey & Co’s latest global survey. The rising tide of online transactions has led to a surge in digital commerce. That has, in turn, lifted other boats: Credit card usage has also expanded.