["The total number of digital transactions fell to 922.9 million in
January from 1,027.70 million in December. In value terms, the number
declined to Rs 98 lakh crore in January from Rs 105.40 lakh crore in
December."

That draws the line to show up the limits of King Canute's powers.]

http://indianexpress.com/article/business/economy/digital-payments-10-per-cent-decline-necessitates-plugging-the-loopholes-4516775/

Digital payments: 10 per cent decline necessitates plugging the loopholes
Measures such as addressing arbitrariness in levying merchant charges,
providing banking facility to the poor and incentives are needed to
spur e-payments.

Written by Pranav Mukul , Anil Sasi | New Delhi | Published:February
10, 2017 4:23 am

The total number of digital transactions fell to 922.9 million in
January from 1,027.70 million in December. In value terms, the number
declined to Rs 98 lakh crore in January from Rs 105.40 lakh crore in
December. Illustration: C R Sasikumar

Notwithstanding the slew of incentives announced by the Centre to
promote digital payments, a 10 per cent fall in digital transaction
volumes in the second month after announcement of demonetisation
reinstates the need to provide adequate incentives towards cashless
payment tools for small-sized transactions along with ubiquitous
financial services to the unbanked Indians. Some of the key measures
that have been suggested to the government to keep the momentum of
digital payments include addressing the arbitrariness in levying
merchant charges, which add to the cost of every electronic
transaction, and the need to enforce the interoperability of digital
tools such as mobile wallets.

“The government has done a lot of things, a lot of schemes are still
on, if they stop then it (volumes of digital payments) will go further
down. There are two verticals of cash users: one is the black money
hoarders, and second is the poor section, which does not have access
to banking infrastructure to conduct small transactions through
cashless means. The second vertical is the one which needs incentives,
convenience and confidence to use cashless transactions. One essential
thing is to make ubiquitous banking facilities available to these
people,” a senior government official told The Indian Express.

As per data released by the Reserve Bank of India, digital payments
fell 10.2 per cent in volume terms and 7 per cent in value terms
during January 2017 compared with December 2016. The total number of
digital transactions fell to 922.9 million in January from 1,027.70
million in December. In value terms, the number declined to Rs 98 lakh
crore in January from Rs 105.40 lakh crore in December. This data
includes digital wallets and mobile banking transactions, electronic
fund transfers, and those on credit and debit cards, among other
methods such as Unified Payments Interface (UPI) and Unstructured
Supplementary Service Data (USSD).

Several committees formed by the government, including the Committee
of Chief Ministers on Digital Payments have suggested the
rationalisation of merchant discount rate, or MDR, on debit card and
credit card transactions. The chief ministers’ panel has recommended,
in its interim report, that a detailed review of MDR regime should be
undertaken by this month. “The committee has already forwarded its
recommendations on the subject to the RBI. The new regime should
consider change in technology, business models of payment service
providers & anticipated increase in digital transactions,” the panel
said in its report.

The Centre had announced that state-owned petroleum companies would
offer a discount of 0.75 per cent of the sale price to consumers on
purchase of petrol or diesel if payment was made through digital means
such as cards, wallets, etc. However, this move also ran in troubled
waters later when the petrol pump owners threatened to strike over the
burden of MDR. Ultimately a truce was agreed upon when it was decided
that the oil PSUs would bear the burden.

It has also suggested that by March, all the public sector banks
should be mandated to extend their technology infrastructure to all
the 56 Regional Rural banks (RRBs) so that these RRBs also become a
part of interoperable Aadhaar Enabled Payment System (AEPS), UPI and
USSD.

Apart from the transaction charges that are levied by banks to
merchants, and eventually passed on to the consumers, a plethora of
convenience charges are also levied by service providers involved in
giving online services. Convenience fee is charged by various ticket
booking operators for services such as movie tickets, air tickets, etc
and is either a flat charge, or a percentage of the total booking
amount. In 2013, the Maharashtra state government had issued a notice
asking theatre chains and booking platforms to stop charging extra for
tickets that are booked online.

Online entertainment ticketing platform BookMyShow, which charges a
percentage of tickets booked as internet handling charge that adds to
the cost of the booking, has justified the fee, calling it the
company’s “bread and butter”.

“Hi User! The internet handling fee is charged for the online ticket
booking service provided by us. We were always charging the fee for
online ticket booking with us. A notification prohibited us from doing
so for some time. Now that it has been stayed, we have resumed
charging it. We try to keep it as reasonable as possible and as per
market rates. This is our bread and butter. This is how we ensure that
you get the best of service,” BookMyShow said on its website in the
FAQ section.

Similarly, airlines also charge the convenience fee that is added to
the total fare of the air ticket. “A convenience fee of Rs 75 per
person per flight for netbanking/cash cards and Rs 150 per person per
flight for credit/debit cards is collected by the airlines
establishing, maintaining and operating the online booking system, to
enable the passengers to book the air tickets online while using a
credit/debit card. This fees includes the charges paid by the airlines
to the concerned bank (varies from one bank to another) for availing
of such facility,” according to information provided by India’s
largest airline IndiGo on its website. It has also said that the
convenience fee is non-refundable.

On the contrary, government provided services have taken the lead in
providing incentives to boost digital payment tools. Apart from petrol
pumps, the state-owned fuel retailers, IOC, BPCL and HPCL will offer
“an upfront discount of Rs 5 on every LPG refill to all LPG customers
who will book and pay for it online”. Furthermore, in the Union Budget
for 2017-18, finance minister Arun Jaitley announced that no service
charge will be levied on tickets booked through IRCTC. Currently, Rs
40 on every ticket booked in air-conditioned classes and Rs 20 on
every ticket booked in sleeper class is levied by the IRCTC when
ticket is booked through its website. “Service charges on e-tickets
booked through IRCTC will be withdrawn. Cashless reservations have
gone up from 58 per cent to 68 per cent,” Jaitley said while
presenting the Budget.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to