Posts tagged ‘Credit card’

10/01/2017

Will India Get Rid of Plastic Money by 2020? – India Real Time – WSJ

After India’s government took 86% of currency out of circulation a couple of months ago, its main policy think-tank has a new plan for the country: rendering plastic money “irrelevant” by 2020.Amitabh Kant, Chief Executive Officer of NITI Aayog, which helps the government formulate long-term policies, said Sunday that India was in the midst of a “huge disruption” in financial technology and innovation, which will enable the country to transition from using plastic money to mobile transactions.

“By 2020, India will make all debit cards, all credit cards, all ATM machines, all [point-of-sale] machines totally irrelevant,” Mr. Kant said at the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas event inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Bangalore.

“In 30 seconds flat, we’ll all be doing our transactions by using our thumb.”

The annual event is aimed at increasing engagement between the government and Indians living overseas.

Mr. Kant was referring to a new mobile app launched by Mr. Modi last week as the 50-day deadline for depositing invalidated 500- and 1000-rupee bank notes came to an end.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks at the Pravasi Bharatiya Divas event in Bangalore, India on Sunday.

Mr. Modi had on Nov. 8 announced the withdrawal of the country’s largest bank notes to crackdown on corruption and counterfeiting. The move caused a severe cash shortage in the economy, although Mr. Modi said later that the problems would abate in 50 days once new bills were back in circulation.

“Give me time until Dec. 30. After that, if any fault is found in my intentions or my actions, I am willing to suffer any punishment given by the country,” he had said.

After 50 days, queues were still forming outside ATMs to withdraw cash, despite the work to recalibrate almost all of the country’s 215,000 ATM machines to issue the new, slimmer notes being completed.

“Bhim,” the new digital payments app currently allows users of Google’s Android platform to transfer money directly from one bank account to another. The government plans to link the app to “Aadhar,” India’s unique identification program. Once that is done, consumers will be able to transact by using their thumbprints to authorize transactions.

“In the next two years, the power of ‘Bhim’ will be such that you wouldn’t need a smartphone, feature phone or even Internet. Your thumb would be enough,” Mr. Modi said at the unveiling of the app on Dec. 30.

The app has already been downloaded by more than 10 million users, Mr. Modi said in a tweet on Monday.

He also took to twitter to tell Indians how the app was a “fine example” of the government’s ‘Make in India’ plan aimed at encouraging local manufacturing, and also the use of technology to end corruption and black money.

On Sunday, Mr. Modi thanked 30 million Indians living abroad for contributing about $69 billion to India’s economy through remittances and hit back at the critics of his government’s currency move.

“It is unfortunate that some worshipers of black money are calling our move anti-people,” he said.

Source: Will India Get Rid of Plastic Money by 2020? – India Real Time – WSJ

27/01/2016

The Drivers of Growth in China’s New Normal – China Real Time Report – WSJ

As China’s economic growth slows and the manufacturing and industrial sectors face declines, many companies are trying to determine whether or where they can tap into more growth.

The old drivers of the economy, including the middle class and the export sector, are out. What’s in for China’s so-called “new normal” is the upper-middle class and the service sector.

Affluent shoppers under the age of 35 and Internet surfers will push China’s consumer market up to $6.5 trillion in sales by 2020, an increase of 54% from 2015, according to consultancy the Boston Consulting Group. Upper-middle class households, defined as those making between $24,001 and $46,000 in annual income, will double to 100 million in population by 2020 and account for 30% of all urban households in the country.

Consumption is not isolated from the slowdown, but China hasn’t stopped shopping, consultancy The Boston Consulting Group said in a recent report. Consumption growth this year is poised to outpace GDP growth, which economists expect to range between 6% and 6.6%, BCG said.

Source: The Drivers of Growth in China’s New Normal – China Real Time Report – WSJ

03/05/2013

* Credit-Card Companies Battle in China

BusinessWeek: “The Ms. Magic credit card from China Citic Bank (601998) is dotted with Swarovski crystals and offers free beauty treatments and health insurance. Huaxia Bank’s (600015) Pretty Lady card, co-issued with Deutsche Bank (DB), entices women with triple points for cosmetic purchases and fitness club memberships. Citigroup (C), which last year became the first U.S. bank allowed to issue its own solo logo cards in China, offers to waive its first-year annual fee of 300 yuan ($49) for Rewards cardholders applying before March or spending more than 20,000 yuan by the end of December.

Credit-Card Companies Battle in China

They’re all part of a battle for affluent consumers in the world’s fastest-growing market for plastic, even as delinquencies have tripled in the past five years and profits remain elusive. “Credit cards are the ultimate growth area and also the battlefield for banks in China,” says Rainy Yuan, an analyst in Shanghai for Taipei-based Masterlink Securities. “Some may never earn a profit out of it, but they have to join the fight, as that’s the most efficient way of grabbing deposits and cross-selling other financial services.”

With interest rates fixed by the government at 18 percent annually, China’s banks can’t compete by lowering rates, so they differentiate themselves by offering merchant discounts and gifts, including Coach (COH) wallets, Hugo Boss (BOSS) quilts, and free Starbucks (SBUX) upgrades to a larger coffee. Chen Junjun, a marketing manager at China Guangfa Bank, spends 10 hours a day, seven days a week trying to lure customers to his roofless booth outside a subway station in Shanghai’s Pudong district. Among the gifts he offers: a wireless mouse, storage boxes, and coffee mugs. “No annual fees, buy-one-get-one-free for Starbucks coffee, and you get a free Coach wallet, too,” Chen says to a female passerby. “If you have a job, you are qualified. If you have a credit card, you are qualified.””

via Credit-Card Companies Battle in China – Businessweek.

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