New Delhi: Digital payments in India are witnessing thriving growth with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 12.7 per cent in the number of non-cash transactions, global advisory KPMG said on Thursday.
A KPMG report said that the mobile payment revolution in the country has led to a boom in the number of merchants adopting digital payments with close to 1.5 million digital payment acceptance locations in 2016-17.
Besides, the number of merchants accepting digital payments modes has increased to over 10 million in a short span of two to three years.
"The mobile payment revolution with its evolving form factors has led to a boom in the number of merchants adopting digital payments. From close to 1.5 million digital payment acceptance locations in 2016-17, the number of merchants accepting digital payments modes has increased to over 10 million, in a short span of two to three years," the report "Fintech in India - Powering mobile payments" said.
The global digital payments market is expected to touch $10.07 trillion by 2026.
QR-code based wallet acceptance points with low
According to KPMG, one of the key factors which played a transformational role and democratised mobile payments in India was the role played by wallet players. The ease of payments, ubiquity, and convenience were the factors which have led to extensive adoption of wallets.
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The mobile wallet market is expected to continue its expansion at a CAGR of nearly 52.2 per cent by volume during 2019-23, it added.
Another factor that has led to the next wave in mobile payments is the Unified Payments Interface (UPI)-based real-time payments. The volume of UPI transactions has increased at a CAGR of 246 per cent during the period from 2016-17 to 2018-19.
Some factors such as
Mobile payments have witnessed a major shift in the past five years with the proliferation of payments like UPI, mobile wallets, Bharat Interface for Money (BHIM), BharatQR and Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD), it said.
The Reserve Bank of India has forecast an outcome of a 50 per cent increase in mobile-based payment transactions as per its '2021 vision document'. This shift can be attributed to driving factors such as robust payment infrastructure, the evolution of form factors, availability of structured data, a shift in
consumer behaviour and the government's vision of transforming India into a cashless economy.
According to the report, while feature phones were limited to USSD, the advent of smartphones and the Internet has opened up a host of form factors and access to payment technologies.