Sacrificial animals’ purchase: SBP set to provide QR code payment mechanism

25 May, 2024

KARACHI: In a major development on digital banking front, the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) is all set to facilitate people purchasing sacrificial animals using QR code payment mechanism through Raast Instant Payment System at nationwide cattle markets on the upcoming Eid-ul-Azha.

Speaking at the 17th international conference titled “Mobile Commerce 2024,” organized by Total Communications, SBP, Payment System Policy and Oversight Department, Joint Director Ahmed Sumair said the SBP is working with banks to bring cattle markets and cattle farmers on QR code on the upcoming Eid-ul-Azha.

He said the project is aimed at solving various pain points including the hassle of carrying cash and making payments to purchase sacrificial animals. The project would help onboarding of cattle farmers and expand financial inclusion through Raast.

“Currently we are working with 25 banks and have selected 50 major cattle markets to enable QR code payment method there to facilitate the masses for the payments”, he informed.

He said that the initiative is being taken to help people and merchants to securely make transactions for the purchase of sacrificial animals, besides helping banks to potentially tap over Rs550-600 billion cattle purchases through digital banking on the annual religious festival.

The cattle markets have been identified in all the 15 cities having SBP field offices including Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Faisalabad and Hyderabad and some six cattle markets alone in Karachi have been identified.

He said the QR code payment method would revolutionize the payment experience, as high cost of installing POS machines at merchants has its own limitations. The QR payment has also enabled small merchants to receive payment through online transactions, discoursing the use of cash in the economy. Merchants may display QR code to receive online payment in a real-time and hassle-free manner.

Reducing the high level of currency In circulation is one of the strategic objectives of State Bank of Pakistan; which can be achieved by enabling digital acceptance points, through QR codes, in every nook and corner of the country.

On the occasion, Yahya Khan Group Head Chief Digital Officer Bank Alfalah Limited said that the cash worth roughlyRs8-10 trillion is in circulation in Pakistan that is very high cash-to-GDP ratio and remained undocumented.

Unveiling the set of recommendations to be presented to Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb soon, Khan, who also heads a banking committee, recommended to discontinue the Rs5,000 notes. The central bank should replace the big denomination note with Rs1,000 notes through digital banking.

Nadeem Husain, Coach, Planet N Group of Companies and Raqami Islamic Digital Bank, said that banking in service and lending would remain key to success for the five digital banks in the making in Pakistan. However, they would face serious challenges like mobilizing deposits and maintaining cyber security to avoid rising fraud with banking customers.

Muhammad Humayun Sajjad, CEO, Mashreq Bank, said the low operating cost of digital banks (DBs)due to no presence of physical branches would enable DBs to pay higher profit margins to depositors to mobile financing.

The one-day conference also featured two panel discussions including Role of Digital Banks in Pakistan and Person to Merchant (P2M) use case of Pakistan’s Instant Payment System Raast-A Game Changer in Digital Ecosystem.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2024

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