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ATMs, bank branches, bearer cheques are back again
Demonetisation, remonetisation, economics
Debit cards, credit cards, wallets on your mobile
Paytm, Mobikwik, Freecharge and USSD too
White money, black money, new notes, old notes
Tax sleuths on the shores, India’s under cashless law
Longer and longer queue wars, I can’t take it anymore
We didn’t start the fire
It was always burning since the world’s been turning...
With apologies to Billy Joel
The last one month has been all about the currency withdrawal and exchange announced by the government, which triggered heated discussions all around on its merits and demerits. Enough has been said and written on the subject and I am not going to add to it. One thing is very clear – India will move towards increasing use of digital payments.
The payment wallet providers are thrilled and have gone to town with their solutions. The banks have reacted somewhat less enthusiastically, understandably so, as they focus on the huge logistical effort needed to take back two thousand three hundred crore notes from customers, issue new notes, and recalibrate automated teller machines (ATMs). The government has visibly been promoting the Unified Payment Interface (UPI), and various other methods of to pay digitally.
There is, however, one big problem. India may have over a billion mobile phone connections, but...
All solutions being presented right now are essentially for smartphones, and something called Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) touted as the solution for feature phones. Anyone who has used or tried to use USSD will tell you that it is complex, and hardly ever works.
To get a better sense of how narrow the service currently offered is, figure this. WhatsApp has an active subscriber base of 160 million in India. It is hard to believe that mobile payments are more common in India than WhatsApp is. That leaves us with a low ceiling of 15 percent of India’s mobile subscriber base. This too could be a high estimate as there are only one hundred million Indians with real data access. Further, data connectivity is an issue that makes transactions fail.
Imagine a simple and well-designed voice interface that one can call, say who we want to transfer money to and it is done.
Payment by phone can truly become a universal option that all Indians with cell phones can use.
Can there be a solution which uses voice to transfer money electronically? Is it too hard, too risky or is there another problem? The answer is a resounding no.
Let me lay out a simple case:
And we are done!
The system uses existing infrastructure to complete the transaction. The simplicity of UPI – no one-time password and no need for account details – is maintained while opening a universal channel for payments.
We can go on, but you get the point.
Yes, I can see you shaking your head saying – if this is so simple and powerful, why hasn’t it been done already? I don’t know.
The technology needed to deliver this experience is already in place. By leveraging UPI or IndiaStack, the country can have a state of the art payment system that is simple for all of us to use.
We would be happy to lay out the technical details at the appropriate stage. I am sure that NPCI and the NITI Aayog are on the lookout and are having discussions with various parties to explore voice based systems and make universal electronic payments a reality.
So irrespective of who they choose to work with, we hope that India gets an easy to use and universally acceptable payment system. Wouldn’t it be great if it is just a phone call away?
Since this article was written, Paytm has announced a feature that allows payment by phone. There have also been a few other announcements on using feature phones for payments. On one hand, they support the argument made above and are good steps on the path towards truly inclusive and secure payment options. However, these are sub-optimal and are not universal in their scope. The need of the hour is not a voice interface for a wallet where loading money, security and inter-operability remain key problems.
It is also not about some isolated banking IVR system that somehow makes feature phone payment theoretically possible in a very closed environment. What India needs is a universal, flexible, open and secure payment mechanism where consumers and merchants will be able to transfer money seamlessly by using all phones including feature phones.
(Sarbvir Singh is an experienced venture capital investor in India and was the founding Managing Director of Capital18. The portfolio of companies that he has worked with include BookMyShow, Yatra and Webchutney among others. )
(The article was originally published in Bloomberg Quint)
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