Posts tagged ‘Debit 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

16/12/2013

India’s debit card safety rule boosts sales of payment solution companies | India Insight

Companies that help in processing card payments look set to benefit from rising demand for portable card swipe machines after the Reserve Bank of India adopted new rules to prevent fraud and enhance security.

Merchants in India usually swipe cards through a reader to generate receipts that customers sign, but the new rule, effective Dec. 1, adds another layer of security by making debit card holders enter their personal identification numbers to validate transactions via these machines, also referred to as point-of-sale (POS) terminals.

Businesses such as fuel stations, hotels and restaurants that normally keep their card machines out of the customer’s reach will have to buy the portable, GPRS-enabled devices to offer convenience to clients.

Sunith Menon, India’s managing director for France-based Ingenico S.A., which manufactures such devices and supplies them to various banks, expects revenue to rise by 20 percent as demand for the wireless POS terminals rises after the new RBI mandate.

“We are seeing an increased requirement coming in from banks,” he said, adding that ICICI-First Data, Bank of Baroda and Axis Bank were among those who have placed orders for GPRS-enabled POS terminals.

Of the 20,000 POS terminals sold every month by Ingenico in the country, 10 percent were GPRS-enabled models. Menon now expects such devices to account for a 30 percent share in his near-term sales.

The new PIN mandate would affect more than 350 million debit card holders in the country. A recent study by industry body ASSOCHAM showed that the debit card users, growing at an annual rate of 18 percent, were clocking sales of 69 billion rupees using POS terminals every month.

The number of POS terminals in the market has grown significantly in the recent years. As of the end of September, there were 965,000 terminals in use across the country, 46 percent higher than the 661,000 devices in March 2012, according to data provided by e-payment services provider Worldline India.

Pine Labs India, which counts Starbucks, Future Group and Pantaloon Retail among its clients, has installed about 4,000 GPRS swipe machines since November, higher than the monthly average of 200 to 300. In the next month, the company expects to install another 2,000 such machines.

via India’s debit card safety rule boosts sales of payment solution companies | India Insight.

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